Programming Brain Trust Archive - Noreascon 4

Worldcon programs * * Wednesday & Thursday * * Friday * * Saturday * * Sunday * * Monday

Wednesday, September 1

Wednesday 8:00 p Clarendon

Open Filk

Wednesday 8:00 p Conference

Filk Office Opens

Wednesday 8:00 p Dalton

Open Filk - No taping

Wednesday 8:00 p Exeter

Open Filk

Wednesday 8:00 p Gardner

Open Filk

Wednesday 8:00 p Hampton

Open Filk

Wednesday 10:00 p Republic B

The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra

Special showing for volunteers and early arrivals

Wednesday 11:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Thursday, September 2

Thursday 2:00 a Conference

Filk Office Closes

Thursday 9:00 a Hall A

Registration Opens

Thursday 10:00 a Hall A

Music

Thursday 10:09 a H210

Concert (The Fibs)

Tom Fenton, Jim Iarocci, Carl William Thiel

Thursday 10:15 a Republic A

All Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku TV #1 -4 [Dubbed] [12 +]

Thursday 11:30 a Conference

Filk Office Opens

Thursday 12:00 n

Official Start of Noreascon 4 for WSFS Purposes

Thursday 12:00 n

Childcare Opens

Thursday 12:00 n H100

Munchkin

Learn to play Munchkin, SJ Games' award winning dungeon crawl card game. [6 players per game]

Thursday 12:00 n H203

Ex Homo Machina: "For a Breath I Tarry" and the Digital Faust

Jason M. Taylor

Thursday 12:00 n H204

Guessing Games: Does the Acceleration of Change Invalidate Extrapolative Fiction?

Is it getting hard to write of future worlds and technologies when change has become so rapid that our children won't recognize the world we grew up in? Can writers keep ahead of the curve? Should they even try? And if they guess "wrong" does that mean they've failed

Steve Carper, Laura Frankos (m), David Friedman, David Gerrold

Thursday 12:00 n H205

Looking Back at The Matrix

The film series is over, the dust has settled, was it all worth it? What worked and what didn't? A look back and assessment of the series as a whole.

Chris Barkley, Colleen Doran, Daniel Kimmel (m), Joe Pearce

Thursday 12:00 n H206

Archetypes in SF: First Contact

In culture clashes between aliens and humans, the humans aren't always the good guys.....discuss the archetype, the ways it's been used, and how to turn it upside down.

Jim Frenkel (m), Walter H. Hunt, Justine Larbalestier, Edward M. Lerner, Karen Traviss

Thursday 12:00 n H208

Fast Forward: Contemporary Science Fiction

Showing and discussion of the fan-created cable TV show about SF

Kathi D. Overton, Tom Schaad

Thursday 12:00 n H209

Oh My Goddess #1 Moonlight and Cherry Bloosoms [Subtitled] [N/R]

Thursday 12:00 n H210

Filk Concert

Mary Mulholland

Thursday 12:00 n H210

Filk Concert 1

Thursday 12:00 n H310

Grand Openings

Once upon a time ("in a galaxy far far away") So, how important is a good opening? What does it need to pull the reader into the story? How can it cast light upon mood, setting, character, tone, and still work as a hook for the reader? Discuss favorite openings, and tell why they work so well. And..... what actually is the "right" beginning for the story? How does a writer figure out if the story on paper's starting too early, too late, or at the right time

Phyllis Eisenstein (m), Carl Frederick, Karin Lowachee, Mary Anne Mohanraj, Karl Schroeder

Thursday 12:00 n Art Show

Art Retro Exhibit Opens

Thursday 12:00 n Beacon A

Moving to Music [ages 1-7]

Clap and sing to the music of Jim Cosgrove, a Kansas City children's folk singer.

Thursday 12:00 n Beacon D

Out of the Box Games (7-12)

Sheila Oranch

Thursday 12:00 n Beacon F

Model Magic Sculpture [ages 3-12]

Model magic is an air-drying clay that can be colored using magic markers. We'll have a different theme for each day's creation.

Thursday 12:00 n ConCourse

Site Selection Opens

Thursday 12:00 n ConCourse

ConCourse Opens

Thursday 12:00 n Gardner

The Real Lord of the Rings (7-12)

After a seven-year journey to Saturn, the Cassini probe has finally arrived. We'll take the kids on a field trip and join Cassini for a look at Saturn and the weirdness in some of its 31 moons. We'll conclude with a video preview of the Christmas Day landing on Saturn's largest moon, Titan.

Steven Hammond

Thursday 12:00 n Grand Ballroom

Finding Nemo

2004 Long Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Thursday 12:00 n Hall A

Music

Thursday 12:00 n Hall D

Dealers Opens

Thursday 12:00 n ConSuite

Con Suite Open

Thursday 12:00 n Republic A

Louie, The Rune Soldier #13 - #16 [Dubbed] [15 +]

Thursday 12:00 n Republic B

Discworld: Wyrd Sisters

Thursday 12:30 p H203

The Writer in the Walls: Forms of Satire in the SF of William Tenn

Jim Davis

Thursday 12:30 p H209

Oh My Goddess #2 Midsummer Nights Dream [Subtitled] [N/R]

Thursday 12:30 p H210

Filk Concert

Matt G. Leger

Thursday 12:30 p H210

Filk Concert 2

Thursday 12:30 p H303

Male Bonding in LOTR -- Seen Through 21st-Century Eyes

It has been noted that Sam and Frodo's relationship is reminiscient of that between a First World War army officer and his batman. But for comtemporary readers, the interactions of Sam and Frodo and of other dyads in the novels, such as Gimli and Legoloas, might be seen as homoerotic.This discussion is intended to explore LotR from that point of view. What elements, specifically, can be read as homoerotic? How do those elements conflict with the characters' futures as laid out by Tolkien in the appendices? And why did Frodo never marry

Victoria McManus

Thursday 12:30 p Hampton

Reading

Delia Sherman

Thursday 1:00 p H203

Examining Discworld from a Popular Culture Perspective

Brian Burns

Thursday 1:00 p H204

Did We Win? SF and its Takeover of Popular Culture

Works that at least have SF&F trappings have taken over a large portion of TV, the movies, and the best-seller lists. Are we happy with this embarrassment of riches

Moshe Feder (m), Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Joe Siclari, Graham Sleight, Walter Jon Williams

Thursday 1:00 p H205

Anime 101

Anime, in the last 20 years, has gotten more popular, and it's tough for non-otaku (i.e., baka) to keep track of everything. This will introduce you to this booming genre.

Christine Carpenito (m), Mari Kotani, Timothy Liebe, Neil Nadelman, Bill Todd

Thursday 1:00 p H206

How Does the Magic Work

Magic needs its own rules, or it becomes a game where the author can do anything at any time. Discuss how to build and maintain a consistent and believable system of magic.

Susan Casper, P. C. Hodgell, Katherine Kurtz, Laurie J. Marks, Katya Reimann (m), Brandon Sanderson

Thursday 1:00 p H208

Firefly Marathon, Episode 1-2

Thursday 1:00 p H209

Oh My Goddess #3 Burning Hearts On The Road [Subtitled] [N/R]

Thursday 1:00 p H210

Filk Concert

Roberta Rogow

Thursday 1:00 p H210

Filk Concert 3

Thursday 1:00 p H303

All About Hall Costumes

Panel/show and tell about what hall costumes are and etiquette regarding wearing and watching them.

Richard Hill, Sandra G. Pettinger

Thursday 1:00 p H307

Luddites of Fandom

Why do some fans persist in doing things the old-fashioned way -- not getting an email connection, or publishing fanzines on paper instead of posting on the Web? Are the people who still use real *paper* a handful of misfit cranks who won't get with the program? Wait -- did we actually SAY that?. The real question may be what medium will serve best in a particular case: a phone call or a letter or a flower. (And maybe, too, how to get along while trying to figure that out.)

Alexis Gilliland (m), John F. Hertz, Fred Lerner, Erwin S. Strauss

Thursday 1:00 p H310

They Should Make a Movie of That...

What SF/F/H short stories, novelettes, novels, trilogies, or series would make great cinema

Mike Conrad, Jim Mann, John Scalzi (m), Carrie Vaughn

Thursday 1:00 p Auditorium

Opening Ceremony

And so it begins, with not-so-solemn rites and rituals. Get a good look at the Guests of Honor, so you can spot them later amongst the adoring crowds.Also take your first opportunity (outside committee meetings) to see the ConChair braindishing a big hammer. Oh,and there may be a surprise. Featuring the fife and drum band: Bostonia Allarum Companie

Deb Geisler, William Tenn, Terry Pratchett, Jack Speer, Peter Weston

Thursday 1:00 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Thursday 1:00 p Beacon D

Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream (7-12)

Ever wonder how fast you can freeze ice cream? Find out when we use a not so ordinary method to make a creamy treat. Taste the results!!

Kathi D. Overton, John Pomeranz

Thursday 1:00 p Beacon F

Origami for the Young [ages 4-6]

Japanese paper folding with big sheets of fun paper and a few simple folds.

Thursday 1:00 p Exeter

Reading

Karin Lowachee

Thursday 1:00 p Gardner

Paper Cutting and Folding (7-12)

Ever wonder how a few snips and folds can turn a flat piece of paper into a 3-D pop-up? This panel will teach you how to make a lantern and a pop-up card.

Persis Thorndike

Thursday 1:00 p Hampton

Reading

S. M. Stirling

Thursday 1:00 p Independence

Deryni Adventure

Join Ann Dupuis, publisher of the upcoming Deryni Adventure Game, for a roleplaying adventure involving Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of travelling performers.


Thursday 1:30 p H203

Exploring Parental Death in Children's Fantasy Literature

Kelly Goodridge

Thursday 1:30 p H209

Oh My Goddess #4 Evergreen Holy Night [Subtitled] [N/R]

Thursday 1:30 p H210

Filk Concert

Terry Kitchen

Thursday 1:30 p H301

Postcolonial SF/F

What is post-colonial SF/F? Who's writing it? Who's reading it? And just as importantly, why is it increasing in importance as the world gets "smaller" thanks to technology

Tobias Buckell

Thursday 1:30 p Exeter

Reading

Laura Anne Gilman

Thursday 1:30 p Hampton

Reading

Debra Doyle, James Macdonald

Thursday 1:45 p Republic A

Orphen: Spell Of The Dragon (#1-3) [Dubbed] [12 +]

Thursday 2:00 p H100

Sportsclix

An excellent baseball simulation from Wizkids. Steal bases, make double or even triple plays, make great plays, and even errors. This collectible figure game uses stats based on the real MLB players from last season for accurate representations of players abilities on the field. [2 players per game]

Thursday 2:00 p H203

Sparking Creativity with SF

Donna Young, Jordan Raddick

Thursday 2:00 p H204

How To Read For Pleasure

This isn't about being a "better reader" - but how to really enjoy what you're reading more!

Paul DiFilippo, Leigh Grossman (m), Ernest Lilley, Val Ontell, Pat York

Thursday 2:00 p H205

Fandom...as a Way of Making Money

Have many fans actually achieved the foal of getting fandom to financially support the things they love to do? Our panelists talk about their own attempts to launch self- sustaining projects, give pointers, and warn about pitfalls. Fannish projects and charities will also be examined.

James Bacon, Charles N. Brown, Norman Cates, Bill Roper (m)

Thursday 2:00 p H206

Welcome to the SF Community: Enjoying the Worldcon

An orientation seminar on the background of the World Science Fiction Convention and tips on making the most of the con.

Janice Gelb (m), Rich Lynch, Patrick Molloy, Sharon Sbarsky, Kevin Standlee

Thursday 2:00 p H209

Oh My Goddess #5 For The Love Of Goddess [Subtitled] [N/R]

Thursday 2:00 p H210

Concert

Rosemary Kirstein

Thursday 2:00 p H301

All is not Bookcovers!

A long time ago when the moon was made of green cheese, you could define SF/F Art as art that appeared on SF/F bookcovers and illustrated SF/F stories in magazines. That's not true anymore -- if it ever way. Now with some SF/F artists working in 3-D and other media, how do you define SF/F art? What are some of the alternate possibilities

David A. Hardy, Karl Kofoed, Theresa Mather, Elise Matthesen (m), Martina Pilcerova

Thursday 2:00 p H302

Where Do Elves Come From

Elves have their roots deep in European folklore, and have also burrowed deeply into modern fantasy literature. Why is this? What makes elves so interesting? What about them appeals to our psyches? Are there different kinds of elves? Are Tolkien's elves, beings who are almost preternatural humans, different in kind for the cute Victorian elves or from the grimmer elven folk of Andersons's Broken Sword"? And what about the modern elves that appear in the night in many urban fantasies"why are they there? What is the significance of a separate, magical or supernatural race of human-like beings

Esther Friesner, Theodora Goss, Kathy Morrow (m), Vera Nazarian, Terry Pratchett

Thursday 2:00 p H303

Building a Better Fanzine

What kinds of things do you look for in a fan publication? What's the best way to get these things done? How do you get people to write for a 'zine, and how do you get them to write interesting things? What's a good use of money for a 'zine, and what's tempting but a better idea to avoid

Guy H. Lillian, Nicki Lynch, Joseph T. Major, Steven H. Silver (m), Geri Sullivan

Thursday 2:00 p H304

Living in an SF World

In an episode of Firefly, Wash declaims that psychic powers are the stuff of science fiction. His wife Zoe points out that he lives in a spaceship. We are already beginning to live in an SF world - how are writers reacting to that? What will SF writers actually write about when we live and work in space

James Alan Gardner, Robert A. Metzger (m), John Moore, Robert J. Sawyer, David Stephenson

Thursday 2:00 p H305

Great (New!) British SF and Fantasy

US readers on the whole are several years behind in discovering such major writers as Ken MacLeod and Alastair Reynolds, and even today the works of Iain Banks often come to the U.S. a year after they are available in the U.K. The panel looks at a number of the U.K. writers who many of us may be missing (allowing us to rush to the Dealers Room or to amazon.uk to find their works.

Jay Caselberg (m), Michael Rennie, Graham Sleight, Charles Stross, Liz Williams

Thursday 2:00 p H306

How Possible is Time Travel

Physics suggests FTL travel may be possible under limited circumstances. Could this be a gateway to time travel? If we get time travel, will nature somehow contrive to preserve causality? Panelists will discuss these and other "timely" issues....

Dave Clements, John G. Cramer, Mark L. Olson, Jack Speer (m), Allen Steele

Thursday 2:00 p H307

(Really) Hard Science for Beginners

So much of the current SF literature talks about quantum physics and other recent hard-to-understand concepts in modern science. An overview, in layman's terms, to help the fan without a heavy science background get more out of the new hard SF. String theory? Quarks? And (best of all), no math! Our panelists will answer the haed questions for you!

Susan Born, Michael A. Burstein (m), Keith G. Kato

Thursday 2:00 p H309

The Art of Margaret-Organ-Kean

This Seattle-based fantasy artist shows you gymnastic jesters, literary fairies and toy unicorns in clean, modern watercorlors or pen-and-ink. Enjoy a classical style with a whimsical smile? Don't miss Margaret -- or her chess- playing zebras.

Margaret Organ-Kean

Thursday 2:00 p H310

Designing Real Spacecraft

A look at what's involved in really designing and building something that's going to go into space. Spacecraft engineers spend a lot of time worrying about things that never make it into the movies or even the novels. Come find out what some of them are.

Henry Spencer

Thursday 2:00 p H311

Alternate Ecologies

Describe how they work. If possible, discuss any truly alien places on Earth (that you might have visited or heard about) that have a fairly "alien" ecology as well!

M. M. Buckner, Janet Catherine Johnston, Larry Niven, Priscilla Olson (m)

Thursday 2:00 p H312

Mind the plot holes dear, dear

Give examples of various discrepancies/problems with details from any piece of SF/F and try to categorize them (examples: temporal, silly, boneheaded, etc.!) How could the story be saved

Grant Carrington, Sharon Lee (m), Louise Marley, Tamora Pierce, Connie Willis

Thursday 2:00 p Art Show

Tour of the Retro Art Exhibit (Jane Frank)

Thursday 2:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Roger MacBride Allen, Colleen Doran, Michael F. Flynn, Karin Lowachee, Lee Martindale, Pamela Scoville

Thursday 2:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Thursday 2:00 p Beacon D

The Care and Feeding of Mythical Creatures (7-12)

Talk with a fannish vet about the various creatures in your care, or those you would like to have.

Karen Purcell

Thursday 2:00 p Beacon F

Make your Own Journal [ages 4-7]

Want to remember the special things about Noreascon 4? This fun journal will give you place to write, draw, or put a picture to keep those memories forever.

Thursday 2:00 p Dalton

The Invention of the Laser

Real invention doesn't fit the standard plot line where a lone genius conceives an idea and carries it to completion, winning fame, fortune, and so on. Bell Labs claims it did. Charles Townes got the Nobel Prize, and Gordon Gould got the multi-million dollar patent. But it was Ted Maiman who actually designed and built the first laser. Learn the story behind it all.

Jeff Hecht

Thursday 2:00 p Exeter

Reading

K. A. Bedford

Thursday 2:00 p Gardner

Rounds Singing for Kids (7-12)

Lois H. Mangan

Thursday 2:00 p Grand Ballroom

Lord of the Rings: Return of the King

2004 Long Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Thursday 2:00 p Hampton

Reading

Walter H. Hunt

Thursday 2:00 p Liberty A

Brotherhood Without Banners (Al Mata)

Thursday 2:30 p H209

Ah, My Goddess: The Movie [Subtitled] [N/R]

Thursday 2:30 p H210

Concert

W. Randy Hoffman

Thursday 2:30 p Dalton

The Folklore of New Orleans

James Cambias

Thursday 2:30 p Exeter

Reading

Mike Shepherd-Moscoe

Thursday 2:30 p Hampton

Reading

Phyllis Eisenstein

Thursday 3:00 p H203

Good and Evil in Genre Literature

Do science fiction, fantasy and horror have underlying moral perspectives? What are they? Do they differ? If so, why

Craig Gardner, Nancy Kress, Paul Levinson, James Macdonald (m)

Thursday 3:00 p H204

The Seven Deadly Myths of Creativity

Stephen P. Kelner

Thursday 3:00 p H205

Must-See TV and Movies

Are you cineliterate? Can you call yourself a fan if you can't recognize "Klaatu berada nicto?" Do you know who Tom Corbett is? Why you should stay away from pod people? We'll talk about the classics, and even the good stuff, from Metropolis to Rocketship XM to Princess Monomoke....

Chris Barkley, Daniel Kimmel, Craig Miller (m), John Scalzi

Thursday 3:00 p H206

Name Droppers

Our panelists tell their most colorful stories about their personal contacts with the field's departed giants. What were they really like

Harry Harrison, William Tenn, Mike Resnick (m), Robert Silverberg

Thursday 3:00 p H210

Concert

Bill Roper

Thursday 3:00 p H302

The Art and Science of Glamour

Looking at layers of reality, at "Lords and Ladies" -- elves (and humans) who bury their natures. How do they do it? Why do we love it

Greer Gilman, Simon R. Green, Terry Pratchett, Madeleine E. Robins (m)

Thursday 3:00 p H303

HAL is not the artist: Creating Good Computer Art

A pixel-by-pixel discussion about using the computer to create art. When is it just fluff

Alan F. Beck, Joe Bergeron, Michael Whelan (m), Frank Wu

Thursday 3:00 p H304

Best Buys....in Swords, Steeds, and Princes

What to look for? How to choose? What are the Best Buys

Zara Baxter (m), Esther Friesner, Karen Haber, Peter J. Heck

Thursday 3:00 p H305

All That Gothic Stuff....

Doom. Gloom. Death. Destruction. Darkness (and despair!). Enough already! What.....why....and how long can it possibly last? (Alas! *sigh*)

Paula Guran, Bey King, Shariann Lewitt, Cecilia Tan, Teresa Nielsen Hayden (m), Liz Williams

Thursday 3:00 p H306

Robots' Rights

The real reason we want AI is that we want perfect slaves. Whether they be butlers, bodyguards, intelligent sex toys, or whatever, we want Jeeves-like competence with hard- wired loyalty and obedience and without the moral issues involved in enslaving _people_. But is there a paradox in that? Is it possible for machines (i.e., any combination of hardware and software) to be smart enough to do what we really want them to do without also being self-aware enough to have "human" rights

David Gerrold, Alexis Gilliland, James Patrick Kelly (m), John Pomeranz, Jack Speer

Thursday 3:00 p H309

Slide Show

Teddy Harvia

Thursday 3:00 p H310

Fantasy Forensics

Real and imagined fantasy stuff -- do vampires get rigor mortis? Does Cthulu have fingerprints? Analyzing a crossbow wound, etc.

Jim Butcher, Stephen Dedman, Tamara Jones, Lisa J. Steele (m)

Thursday 3:00 p H311

Writers We Don't Understand

Charlie Stross loads his stories with so much IT jargon it makes the head spin. A PhD in Physics is necessary to get full enjoyment out of a Greg Egan novel. China Mieville is best read with an open dictionary handy. Are these writers doing this on purpose? Are they that much smarter than the rest of us, or are we getting a year of painstaking research downloaded into us in a compressed format? Is there a good stylistic reason to confuse your readers

Paul DiFilippo, Carl Frederick, Eileen Gunn, Matthew Jarpe (m)

Thursday 3:00 p H312

The Real Year

(Readercon) It has been said (Clute) that every SF text, regardless of the year it claims to be set in has an underlying "real year" which shines through, the secret point in time that fives the work its flavor. The real year of any Bradbury story, for example, is 1927, for any Spider Robinson story, 1970...Clute has also noted that as the real year of the book approaches the present, the harder it is to read or writer or understand....agreed? Which SF texts have been this cutting edge....and what happens to those texts as time passes by? Is the real year of the fiction something the writer can control (or even want to control?)

John Clute, Graham Sleight, Eric M. Van (m), Andrew Wheeler

Thursday 3:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Jack L. Chalker, Scott Edelman, Bob Eggleton, Edward M. Lerner, Shane Tourtellotte, Karen Traviss

Thursday 3:00 p Beacon D

Video Games and Storytelling (7-12)

Michael Gilmartin

Thursday 3:00 p Beacon F

Magic Wands [ages 2-12]

Turn a chopstick into a magic wand to bring your imagination to life.

Thursday 3:00 p Dalton

Science Writing

Good writing about science can nurture the science- fictional imagination, and in turn the imagery of SF often illuminates discourse about the frontiers of knowledge. How does the best science writing differ from the mediocre? How does it get past superficial and cliched ideas to convey a deeper insight into science and technology? Which nonfiction books have tickled our sense of wonder? How does SF influence good science writers

Guy Consolmagno, David Friedman (m), Jeff Hecht, Samuel Scheiner, W. A. Thomasson

Thursday 3:00 p Exeter

Reading

Mary H. Rosenblum

Thursday 3:00 p Gardner

WETA for Kids (7-12)

WETA did the special effects for the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy

Norman Cates

Thursday 3:00 p Hampton

Reading

Walter Jon Williams

Thursday 3:00 p Liberty C

Klatchian Foreign Legion

Ann M. Caggiano

Thursday 3:00 p Republic A

Crusher Joe: The Movie [Subtitled]

Thursday 3:00 p Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon)

Priscilla Olson

Thursday 3:30 p H210

Filk Concert

Edward James

Thursday 3:30 p H307

The "Mature" SF Reader/Writer

Pat York

Thursday 3:30 p Exeter

Reading

James Killus

Thursday 3:30 p Hampton

Reading

Sean McMullen

Thursday 4:00 p

Deadline for Submission of New Business to WSFS Business Meeting

Thursday 4:00 p H107

Mission of Gravity

A round-table discussion of the 1953 Retro Hugo nominated novel.

Anthony R. Lewis

Thursday 4:00 p H203

Teaching Horror Literature (Carl Sederholm, Dennis Perry, Sally Taylor)

Thursday 4:00 p H203

Science, SF, and Reading in the Upper Elementary Grades (David Michelson)

A hands-on worskhop of methods of incorporating SF into the classroom. The Challenger centers will also be introduced.

Thursday 4:00 p H204

Tolkien's Techniques

It has been said that if Tolkien had been a professional writer (in the usual sense of the word) he would not have dared to do some of the things he did (such as tell large chunks of the story in flashback.) His techniques worked very well.....why? How hard is it to pull off, anyway? Discuss.

Daniel Grotta, Pete Grubbs, Elise Matthesen (m), Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Jo Walton

Thursday 4:00 p H205

SF as an International Phenomenon

From Barcelona to Beijing, exciting SF is being written in tongues other than English. Our presenters will discuss recent efforts to break down the language barriers within the international SF community. This *is* the World Science Fiction Convention, after all, so let's talk about what's happening in our field around the planet.

James Morrow, Kathy Morrow

Thursday 4:00 p H206

Your Dream Convention

Your wealthy great-uncle Willard has died and left you $20 million on the condition you spend it enjoying yourself! So you decide to hold the greatest SF con ever. What? (A super, exclusive, relaxacon, a convention that would dwarf the World Con) Where?, When?, Who would you invite, and who would you deliberately exclude...C'mon, it's your dream convention...! Now....ready-set-go!: starting from Opening Ceremonies (if there is one) and proceeding chronologically through the convention,. take turns making a one-sentence comment on each (waking) hour of *your* DreamCon....and feel free to comment on your co-panelists' dreams!

James Bacon, Mike Glyer, David R. Howell (m), Andrew Porter, Roger Sims

Thursday 4:00 p H208

Masquerade's Greatest (Literary) Hits

Video presentation and commentary on a quarter-century of Worldcon costumes inspiored by science fiction and fantasy literature. . Enjoy them all!

Susan de Guardiola

Thursday 4:00 p H209

Magical Knight Rayearth [Subtitled]

Thursday 4:00 p H210

Filk Concert

Blind Lemming Chiffon

Thursday 4:00 p H301

How to Lie With Statistics

Surely advertisers, activists, industry and government would NEVER abuse your trust by playing fast and loose with numbers. Especially after this ever-popular program arms you with the straight dope on scads of crooked digit tricks!

Michael F. Flynn

Thursday 4:00 p H302

Artificial Intelligence, and How the Brain Works

Artificial intelligence in SF borders on the magical. How close are we to true AI, and what will it actually look like? How will we define/test for/recognize it? Will it work like the human brain? (And how does that work, anyway - is the "mind as software" model obsolete?) Are we Turing Machines.....or will AIs be us

Tom Galloway (m), David Gerrold, David McMahon, David Mumford, G. David Nordley

Thursday 4:00 p H303

Writers' Tricks and Tips

How do you borrow from another culture? Make up an alien language? Describe something you've never seen? Authors discuss some of the tricks of the trade.

Steve Antczak (m), K. A. Bedford, Nicholas A. DiChario, Gavin Grant, Yves Meynard

Thursday 4:00 p H304

Fantasy Motifs in SF Literature

Fantasy is about elves, and SF is about spaceships, and ne'er the twain shall meet, right? Or is it? It has even been noted that an "enchanted forest" exists in "Against the Fall of Night"ābut"butāthat's sf"not fantasy! So what happens when SF uses fantasy motifs? Is it no longer SF, or at least not "real" SF? Is Yoda Merlin? AKKA the One Ring? How does a writer take a classic fantasy motif and make it SF - or it more than just dressing it in hardware? Are there any fantasy motifs which have not been used"or cannot be used? Why do hard sf writers bother to play with folkloric images: What do they get out of this miscegenation, (and why?)

Laura Frankos, Rosemary Kirstein, Josepha Sherman, Sarah Zettel (m)

Thursday 4:00 p H305

As You Know, Bob: The Positives and Negatives of Infodumps in Writing

Exposition can be quick or subtle, or straight, or with a twist. It can stop the story cold, or provide plot (and stylistic) impact. It can be smooth or lumpy, necessary or gratuitous. The panel will discuss expository theory and practice, and answer the eternal question: "What does Bob really know?"

Debra Doyle, Terry McGarry (m), Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Thursday 4:00 p H306

Roger Rabbit, and Beyond

A talk.

Gary K. Wolf

Thursday 4:00 p H307

Woe is me! I am the first woman ever to set pen to paper..."

Margaret Cavendish wrote "The Blazing World" in the late 1600's, Mary Shelley produced "Frankenstein" over a hundred years later. Come to a round table discussion of the early female fantasists, and find out whether they really had any influence -- and what it was, if so. And, why (oh, why!) they keep getting forgotten!

Elaine Brennan

Thursday 4:00 p H309

A Horse is not a Motorcycle

Many writers treat horses like motorcycles. But actually they're more like aliens who we can mostly convince to take us where we want to go if we're nice to them. Horse people talk about what horses are really like and how to use them realistically in fiction.

Ellen Asher, Karen Purcell (m), Melinda Snodgrass

Thursday 4:00 p H310

My Favorite Planet

What fictional (or, non-fictional?) world would you most like to visit or inhabit? Why? Describe it. (Past, future, or alternative Earths also gratefully appreciated.)

Edward M. Lerner, Larry Niven, Mary H. Rosenblum, Karl Schroeder (m)

Thursday 4:00 p H311

The Singularity and the Eschaton: Compare and Contrast

Vernor Vinge has popularized the concept of the Singularity as a point in the (near?) future where advancing technology changes the human condition so radically that it becomes quite literally incomprehensible to anyone whose world-view was formed before that point. This sounds a lot like the religious concept of the Eschaton, the End of Time, when divine intervention destroys the world as we know it and replaces it with "a new heaven and a new earth." Without debating the validity of either concept (which would be futile and open-ended), let's discuss the points that these two ideas have in common and the points on which they differ. It might also be worthwhile to tie in some other arguably Eschaton-like ideas, such as "the withering away of the State" in classical Marxism or the "end of history" in some modern Neoconservative thinking.

Janice M. Eisen, Mark L. Olson (m), Timothy L. Smith, Charles Stross, Janine Ellen Young

Thursday 4:00 p H312

Prejudices We Haven't Thought of...Yet

Will it matter how many eyes you have? What gender, if there are many? Whether you're black on the left of right side of the body? (OK, Star Trek did think of that!)

Jack Dann, Katherine Kurtz, Katya Reimann, Wen Spencer (m)

Thursday 4:00 p Autographing

Autographing

John G. Cramer, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe, Tamora Pierce, Mark W. Tiedemann, Liz Williams

Thursday 4:00 p Beacon A

Playground Games [ages 4-7]

Play basic rule games in a more organized manner than open playtime (Duck, Duck, Goose; Animal Tag; Simon Says, etc)

Thursday 4:00 p Beacon D

Funny Stories (7-12)

Don Sakers

Thursday 4:00 p Beacon F

Shrinky Dinks [ages 4-12]

Wonderful plastic you can color and then shrink in to a permanent piece of jewelry.

Thursday 4:00 p Clarendon

Filk Lyrics Workshop

Your song from the heart needs a little buffing. Come work with an experienced songwriter to remove the trite and introduce the small touches that make your lyrics unique.

David Weingart

Thursday 4:00 p Exeter

Reading

Theodora Goss

Thursday 4:00 p Gardner

Stump the Scientists! (7-12)

We know you're smart. Here's a chance to test your skills against our panelists. Bring your questions and quiz these specialists.

Michael A. Burstein (m), Bridget Coila, Isaac Szpindel

Thursday 4:00 p Hampton

Reading

Robert J. Sawyer

Thursday 4:00 p ConSuite

Knitting (and other crafts) Circle

Thursday 4:00 p Liberty A

Online Writing Workshop (James Stevens-Arce)

Thursday 4:30 p H210

Pegasus Nominees Concert

Thursday 4:30 p Dalton

Game-related Fiction

Janna Silverstein

Thursday 4:30 p Exeter

Reading

Justine Larbalestier

Thursday 4:30 p Hampton

Reading

Sharon Lee, Steve Miller

Thursday 5:00 p H107

Ms Manners for RPGs

Managing problem players, RMs, and other social issues in RPGs.

Lisa J. Steele

Thursday 5:00 p H204

Vampire Mysteries: A Dialog

Charlaine Harris, Toni L. P. Kelner

Thursday 5:00 p H205

How Bad Can a Bad Panel Get

Whose program is it, anyway? We'll discuss, model, and generally dissect the questionable (and sometimes outrageous) behaviors exhibited by program participants (and the audience!) at diverse conventions. Come prepared to be bored by speakers, experience the effects of panel hogging, see totally random subject changes, attacks on the other panelists and the audience, and all those other behaviors that make for poor panel participation. We'll share stories, advice, and solutions for same. (Note: while program participants certainly don't have to come to this, it wouldn't hurt to check it out, anyway!) Join us for the worst program item ever! (And -- oh yes! -- the audience gets to vote people off the panel every 10 minutes....)

Janice Gelb, John F. Hertz (m), Jim Mann, Craig Miller, Priscilla Olson, Edie Stern

Thursday 5:00 p H206

Rocket Talk, with Fizz and Fuse, the Reactor Brothers

Got a problem with your starship? Attitude thrusters making funny noises? Can't agree with your spouse on which model light sail to buy? (And should you *really* change your dilithium crystals every 3000 light years?) Come ask Fizz and Fuse, who, like their ancestors Click and Clack the Tappet Brothers, will take questions from the audience and offer advice on repairs, purchases, and personal relationships, all unencumbered by the constraints of physics *or* common sense.

Bill Higgins, Jordin T. Kare

Thursday 5:00 p H208

Masquerade's Greatest (Media) Hits

Video presentation and commentary on a quarter-century of Worldcon costumes inspiored by science fiction and fantasy film and television. Enjoy them all!

Susan de Guardiola

Thursday 5:00 p H210

Chapter and Verse

Stories and the songs about them or which inspired them. Author meets songwriter. Panel, Permormance, and Reading.

Bill Sutton

Thursday 5:00 p H301

Deconstructing Mary Sue

Could it be the most useful literary concept of our Me Millennium? We'll discuss myriad examples, from fanfic, flicks, and major SF works that should be ashamed of themselves. You see, in the classic Mary Sue story, a character happens to be amazingly like the author, except said MS is incredibly more attractive, accomplished, and most of all accepted nay beloved than anybody outside of a blatant wish fulfillment. The Audience is Warned, however, that the latter portion of the hour may turn into a rant on the subject of Ambient Misinformation about Writing and Publishing...

Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Thursday 5:00 p H302

Angel, the final episode

Did the final episode answer the questions raised in the 5- year arc? Was it a satisfactory conclusion

Ginjer Buchanan, Susan Casper, Bey King (m), Martha Wells

Thursday 5:00 p H303

Welcome to the SF Community: Making Connections

Now that you're here, here's how to meet people, get involved, and learn to understand our eccentric community!

James Bacon, Elaine Brennan (m), Grant Kruger, Joel Zakem

Thursday 5:00 p H304

Predicting the Next Ten Years

Our brave (or foolhardy) panelists each make five predictions about science or society or the SF community that they believe might well materialize within the next decade. We'll publish at least one of these predictions a day in the con newsletter. Keep copies, everyone, and see you for the panel's second half in 2014!

Justin Ackroyd, David Gerrold (m), Joe Haldeman, Chris Moriarty

Thursday 5:00 p H305

The Klingon Language

An introduction to Klingon grammar. You WILL be able to speak thousands of Klingon sentences at the end of the hour.

Lawrence Schoen

Thursday 5:00 p H306

It Came From The South - Bubba SF&f

Southern gothic is a recognized theme in literature. How does living in the South (U.S.., that is) affect writers' views, styles, plots, and outlooks? Is it more than just funny dialects

F. Brett Cox (m), Melanie Fletcher, Lee Martindale, Allen Steele

Thursday 5:00 p H307

Fine Art and Filthy Pictures

Just where do we draw the line? Why, for instance, is full frontal female nudity usually OK, while male nudity is not? (And must all those bare bodies be "perfect" for it to be "art"?)

Laurie Toby Edison, Irene Gallo, Margaret Organ-Kean

Thursday 5:00 p H309

Traditional Structures of Plays and Fiction

The traditional structure of a play is a build-up to a climax at the midpoint of the play (and how DO you achieve a perfect climax, anyway?) and then a slow draw down until the ending and denouement. Some works of SF and fantasy follow that model and others don't. What other models are there , and where would one of them best be used, versus the traditional isosceles triangle structure described here

Suzy McKee Charnas, Jim Grimsley, Martha Soukup, James Stevens-Arce (m)

Thursday 5:00 p H310

Moods and Medications: Psychopharmacology

Psycho-pharmacology claims to have made great strides in the past decade or so in developing various medications. But most of these have side effects and many are controversial. Problems have emerged when they are given to teenagers and children. Have we really found an effective way to medicate mood disorders? What are the consequences? The outlook for the future? And who defines what moods are medicable

Charles Ardai (m), Matthew Jarpe, Michael Rennie, Eric M. Van

Thursday 5:00 p H311

The Shadow of the Torturer: The Writer as God

Do you abuse your characters? Do you do this to further the story, or because it's necessary to make the story more believable...or, to exorcise your own demons? Writing's potential for self-revelation may be its most powerful and terrifying aspect. How do you cope when your story is telling you something you don't want to know about the dark shadow of the self...

Lois McMaster Bujold, Barbara Chepaitis (m), James Alan Gardner, Tamara Jones, Elizabeth Moon, Uncle River

Thursday 5:00 p H312

The Art of Screen Writing: Big and Small

How does writing for TV and the movies differ from writing for print media? In terms of subject matter, polish, and creative freedom, which is more rewarding? Panelists will discuss these, and the differences between styles and intent when converting a short story or novel to a screenplay.

George R. R. Martin (m), Sandra McDonald, Melinda Snodgrass, Gary K. Wolf

Thursday 5:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Norman Cates, Paul DiFilippo, Leigh Grossman, Eileen Gunn, Michelle Sagara West

Thursday 5:00 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Thursday 5:00 p Beacon D

Riddles in the Dark (7-12)

Reading from The Hobbit.

jan howard finder

Thursday 5:00 p Beacon F

Postcard to a Friend [ages 2-12]

Everyone loves getting a postcard from someone far away. Make one to send to your friend back home.

Thursday 5:00 p Dalton

Art from the Someday File

If you could illustrate anything, what would you choose? Why? And what would you find most difficult? Muse aloud about the subjects you're itching to tackle, and the projects you're planning to get to real soon now....

Joseph DeVito, Ruth Sanderson, Michael Whelan, Janny Wurts (m)

Thursday 5:00 p Exeter

Reading

John G. Hemry

Thursday 5:00 p Gardner

HoverDisc Games [ages 7-12] (Steven Chalker)

Don't know what a Hover Disc is? Come and find out; you'll be hooked.

Thursday 5:00 p Hampton

Reading

Paul Levinson

Thursday 5:00 p Republic A

Memories [Subtitled] [PG 13]

Thursday 5:30 p H203

On Clark Ashton Smith

A close look at the works and legacy of one of the neglected great writers of the genre.

Jack L. Chalker

Thursday 5:30 p Clarendon

The Fiction of Connie Willis

Janice M. Eisen

Thursday 5:30 p Exeter

Reading

Gavin Grant

Thursday 5:30 p Hall A

Music

Thursday 5:30 p Hampton

Reading

Connie Willis

Thursday 6:00 p

Childcare Closes

Thursday 6:00 p H204

The Science of Chocolate

Learn about chocolate chemistry, the history of chocolate from prehistory to today, different types of chocolate, and how chocolate is made. Feed your cravings!

Susan Born

Thursday 6:00 p H205

Tall Tech Tales

Panelists, with considerable audience participation, tell real life amusing anecdotes about the sciences. Example: at one point the MIT AI Lab built a robot to play ping-pong. Marvin Minsky, one of the founders of AI, happened to walk by and the robot almost decapitated him, since it mistook his bald head for a ping-pong ball.....Beat that!

Guy Consolmagno, Jeff Hecht (m), Robert A. Metzger

Thursday 6:00 p H206

Fannish Eye for the Mundane Guy

Fans will give a total lifestyle remake to a mundane or two. ....

Esther Friesner, Lynn Gold, John F. Hertz (m), David R. Howell, Suford Lewis, Edie Stern

Thursday 6:00 p H210

Filk Concert

Kathleen Sloan

Thursday 6:00 p H301

Where Have All the Autos Gone

Why does SF rarely (if ever) include wheeled cars

Chris French

Thursday 6:00 p H302

Cardboard Characters

Are they always bad? Old-fashioned SF used to be known for "cardboard characters," and being plot and action driven. But, having the cardboard characters wasn't necessarily only from a perceived lack of characterization skills or interest on the part of writers and authors -- spending the time and effort to attempt to have more fully-fleshed out, multidimensional characters, might have led to different stories, not necessarily appreciated by the audience, or longer, more complicated stories, again, not necessarily desired by the audience. Then again, a lot of it may have been because of shortcomings and short deadlines for writers and publishing. But with all that, are there times when cardboard characters -work-, and are the right way to go

Sharon Lee, Chris Moriarty, Steve Saffel (m), Laura Underwood

Thursday 6:00 p H303

"Finishing" the Costume

Discusses the pieces needed to make a costume really "finished." Finding, making, and decorating appropriate headpieces and footwear for costumes. Materials and methods to make stage props.

Janet Catherine Johnston, Pierre E. Pettinger (m), Carol Salemi

Thursday 6:00 p H304

Riding the Slipstream

In between the genres is a new non-genre called slipstream. Can it really be defined? Should it be? How is it enlivening long-standing genres

F. Brett Cox (m), Theodora Goss, Mary Anne Mohanraj, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Delia Sherman, Andrew Wheeler

Thursday 6:00 p H305

Compulsive Collecting

What behavioral traits are shared by compulsive collections - and is there any good way of treating the disease (or even the symptoms?) Do you collect or just acquire? Panelists discuss the differences When does collecting become hoarding? Panelists share stories of collection mania, and explain some ways of controlling these compulsions (or, at least, storing the results)

Thomas Atkinson, Chris Barkley, Geary Gravel, Pamela Scoville (m)

Thursday 6:00 p H306

Unlimited Access

Issues involving unlicensed access to spectrum.

Cory Doctorow, Harold Feld (m)

Thursday 6:00 p H307

Well Played Fan

The basics of Gaming that EVERY fan should know!

Mary Crowell, W. Randy Hoffman, Tamara Jones, Wil McDermott, Bill Todd (m)

Thursday 6:00 p H309

Language: Barrier or Bridge

Translations bring works to audiences who can't read them in the original, but how are the works affected when the words change

Nomi Burstein (m), Anna Feruglio Dal Dan, Sheila Finch, Yves Meynard, Vera Nazarian

Thursday 6:00 p H311

Take the Blue Pill... no, wait

Ooops....giving antipsychotics to kids was, well, crazy...sorry, that new diet turns out to be fatheaded...OK, take those breast implants back out of the fridge, little lady.... When medical science keeps changing its mind, how (and why?) do we keep up

Bridget Coila, Perrianne Lurie, Ronald Taylor, W. A. Thomasson, Karen Traviss (m), Trish Wilson

Thursday 6:00 p H312

The Quest

For what? Irregardless....how are quests really about a search for identity and "adulthood"

Mindy Klasky, James Macdonald, Madeleine E. Robins, Jeff VanderMeer (m)

Thursday 6:00 p Art Show

Art Show Opens

Thursday 6:00 p Clarendon

Filking in Klingon

Mark Mandel, Lawrence Schoen

Thursday 6:00 p ConCourse

Site Selection Closes for Day

Thursday 6:00 p Dalton

Developing On-Line Games

Jessica Mulligan

Thursday 6:00 p Exeter

Reading

Grant Carrington

Thursday 6:00 p Fan Lounge

Fancyclopedia - Live!

Joe Siclari (m), Jack Speer, Milton F. Stevens

Thursday 6:00 p Grand Ballroom

Pirates of the Caribbean

2004 Long Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Thursday 6:00 p Hall A

Music

Thursday 6:00 p Hall D

Dealers Closes

Thursday 6:00 p Hampton

Reading

Wen Spencer

Thursday 6:00 p Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon)

Laurie Mann

Thursday 6:30 p H100

Mechwarrior Tournament

Bring your army and put it to the test in this Wizkids authorized tournament. [1200 pts. Mech only]

Thursday 6:30 p H210

Filk Singalong with Filthy Pierre

Erwin S. Strauss

Thursday 6:30 p H301

Birds of Prey

Birds of Prey have long fascinated writers and readers of speculative fiction. Learn more about them from someone who has studied them for more than thirty years and has used them extensively in his fiction. While geared toward writers who wish to become more familiar with raptors and owls, this talk will interest anyone curious about these marvelous creatures.

David B. Coe

Thursday 6:30 p Mended Drum

Fiddle Concert (Roland Liu)

Thursday 6:30 p Dalton

WSFS Mark Protection Committee Meeting

This committee manages the WSFS service marks like "Worldcon" and "Hugo Award" and consists of members elected by the Business Meeting and appointed by Worldcon and NASFiC committees. This meeting is open to all Worldcon members.

Thursday 6:30 p Exeter

Reading

Matthew Jarpe

Thursday 6:30 p Hampton

Reading

Toni L. P. Kelner

Thursday 7:00 p

First Night Begins

Thursday 7:00 p H200

The Ankh-Morpork Ball: Dancing Through the Ages, (Mark Waks, Justin du Couer, Larry Schoeder)

Catch an early dinner and dance through the ages with us. The evening starts with Participatory Renaissance Dance: Easy dances from the 16th and 17th centuries. Everything will be taught, so come on in! Run by the Society for Creative Anachronism (Justin du Coeur, dancemaster). Follow this with Ballroom dancing of the ages; including Waltz, Polka, One Step, Tango, Swing, Rock. Finally, the wind up the evening with modern music. Bring your dance shoes!
7pm - 8pm - Rennaissance dancing
8pm - 10:30pm - Vintage dancing
10:30pm - 2am - Modern dancing

Thursday 7:00 p H205

Future House: a Tribute to PBS "House" Shows

We envision a mixed group of average folks from the USA of 2004 living for 3 months in a typical 2104 biopodplex. Imagine adjusting to IV plumbing and the 1000-hour workweek alone! How long till the sex, lies, and betrayals begin? OK....describe your experiences in the Future House.....

Rusty Hevelin, James Patrick Kelly, Ellen Kushner, Connie Willis (m)

Thursday 7:00 p H206

Punday

A host provides topics to a set of contestants who must in turn make a not-yet-said pun on that topic within 30 seconds. When someone misses or repeats, they're gonged out and the topic changes.

Jordin T. Kare, Josepha Sherman

Thursday 7:00 p H208

Godzilla: My Favorite Monster

Born in Japan as a nuclear allegory, now an American favorite in innumerable remakes and variants......The original "Gojira" was released in the U.S. only this year. What is the big guy's appeal? What will the next Zillagimmick be? Enjoy the discussion, and this collection of commercials, trailers, and other oddities. Happy Birthday!

Bob Eggleton

Thursday 7:00 p H209

Ask Dr. Mike

What can you get for the man who knows everything? Science fiction's wildly acclaimed answer to Drs. Hawking, Ruth, Phil, and Laura asks only for the gift of your most challenging questions about science, philosophy, history, the meaning and origin of life, and that awkward con restaurant invitation thing....

John M. Ford

Thursday 7:00 p H210

Filk Concert

David Weingart

Thursday 7:00 p H303

Making Book

How can you produce your own fine art books? Today's printing technology makes it possible for an individual artist to produce bound portfolios and monograph books for an investment of hundreds of dollars instead of tens of thousands. In the past year Ctein has begun issuing a series of large-format, high-quality, hand-printed-and- bound art books. In this hour he will discuss his experiences with this novel publishing experiment and explain how others can do this for themselves.

Ctein

Thursday 7:00 p H306

The Seven Deadly Sins of SF and Fantasy

Admit it -- some SF motions just don't make sense...and a lot of them become standard background elements in the genre. Discuss a bunch of them (well, at least 7 - and invent some new ones of your own, if you want!), why they're so terrible, and how they get established. Is it just that People Don't Think, or are there other reasons for these lousy ideas

Craig Gardner, Geary Gravel, Rosemary Kirstein, Justine Larbalestier (m)

Thursday 7:00 p H309

Spintronics

Kevin P. Roche

Thursday 7:00 p H310

Future of the Space Shuttle

Should we kill the shuttle (and space station) now? After all, they sounded good at the time, but these both seem to be turning into somewhat useless moneypits. (True or false?) Then, what should follow them? NASAs current directive is to go to the moon and then to Mars using a manned vehicles. Is that a good idea? What's going to work

Jeff Hecht (m), Allen Steele, Ian Randal Strock

Thursday 7:00 p H311

The Return of 20 Panels an Hour...

A preview of the program? Using patented ThoughtSquasher compression technology, Boskone's barely tolderated "Sunday, Funny Sunday" crew flees to Noreascon's First Night. Watch with whimpering amazement as they whip through at least 20 complete panel topics (not including this one) in 55 minutes or less. Warning: do not apply directly to brain.

Michael A. Burstein, Keith R. A. DeCandido, Bob Devney (m), Leigh Grossman

Thursday 7:00 p ConCourse

Giant Icehouse

Try many unique games like Martian Chess played with giant pyramids!

Thursday 7:00 p ConCourse

Terry on Trial

...for such charges as "failing to stop at a trilogy," "writing with undue care and attention," "cruelty to animals," and "being a rich bastard!." Celebrity witness will include Death, Nanny Ogg, and others. Caselberg as prosecutor, Friesner as defender, Bacon as judge....

James Bacon, Esther Friesner, Jay Caselberg (m), Mary Kay Kare, Terry Pratchett

Thursday 7:00 p Exeter

Reading

James Cambias

Thursday 7:00 p Hampton

Reading

Thomas Harlan

Thursday 7:00 p Midway

First Night Kickoff

Featuring a fanfare by The Star Chamber

Thursday 7:00 p Republic A

Martian Successor Nadesico: Prince Of Darkness [Subtitled] [15 +]

Thursday 7:30 p

Filk Concert

H. Paul Shuch

Thursday 7:30 p Exeter

Reading

Lee Martindale

Thursday 8:00 p H205

How to Start a Magazine.....and Why You Shouldn't

So,you need a business plan and seed money, and (oh yean) readers. Plus you need to create? exploit? a new niche in the market, so youseem fresh and relevant , Are you sure you've got what it takes

George H. Scithers

Thursday 8:00 p H209

Comedy Routine

Harry Harrison and Gary Davis ("World Citizen No. 1") do comedy!

Harry Harrison

Thursday 8:00 p H210

Selections from The Filkado.

Thursday 8:00 p Art Show

Ellen James, harpist

Edward James

Thursday 8:00 p Autographing

Autographing

William Tenn, Peter Weston

Thursday 8:00 p Mended Drum

Tavern Songs

Sean McMullen, Faye Ringel

Thursday 8:00 p Clarendon

Open Filk

Thursday 8:00 p ConCourse

Blindfolded Sculpting

Sandra Lira, Heidi Hooper, Susan Finley, Mike Ventrella, and two guest sculptors lead this demonstration -- with audience participation as well!

Thursday 8:00 p Dalton

Open Filk - No taping

Thursday 8:00 p Exeter

Reading

Cecilia Tan

Thursday 8:00 p Fan Lounge

TAFF/DUFF Reception

Thursday 8:00 p Hampton

Reading

Katya Reimann

Thursday 8:00 p Independence

Deryni Guide

An old friend sent a cryptic message, might he have found a fabled treatise on Deryni magic? Where is he? And who else might be looking for the book, and the power it represents? A Deryni adventure featuring Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of traveling performers. Katherine Kurtz is co-GM for this adventure.

Thursday 8:00 p Republic B

X2: X-Men United

2004 Long Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Thursday 8:30 p H205

Give Me Back the Rabbit, and Nobody Gets Hurt

Sharing the experiences and explaining ways of dealing with audience problems during magic shows

Daniel P. Dern

Thursday 8:30 p Art Show

Ellen James, Harpist

Edward James

Thursday 8:30 p Dalton

Set Phasers to Stun

A look at less-than-lethal weapons in fiction and reality.

Lisa J. Steele

Thursday 8:30 p Exeter

Reading

Victoria McManus

Thursday 8:30 p Hampton

Reading

Jim Butcher

Thursday 8:30 p Republic A

Samurai X: The Motion Picture [Dubbed] [17 +]

Thursday 9:00 p H205

The Precarious State of SF in Sweden

John-Henri Holmberg

Thursday 9:00 p H206

A Scene a Minute?/Whose Line Is It

How well can our teams of participants act out well-known scenes in a minute or less.....and have the audience guess what they're doing!

Michael A. Burstein (m), Nomi Burstein, Solomon Davidoff, Michael McAfee, Michael Rennie, Josepha Sherman

Thursday 9:00 p H208

Coming Attractions - What Films to see at Worldcon (First Night)

Thursday 9:00 p H209

Readings from the Published Works of Absent Writers

The doorknob opened a blue eye....open mike reading of your favorite excerpts. Bring your own favorite 3-minute pieces (that are particularly meaningful to you) and read the, Join the read-in.

jan howard finder, Mary Kay Kare

Thursday 9:00 p H210

Thomas the Rhymer

This performance interlaces portions of Ellen Kushner's award-winning novel "Thomas the Rhymer" with the traditional ballads that inspired it. Accompanied by fiddler Joe Kessler, she creates a living picture in words and song of the mortal minstrel taken by the Queen of Elfland to serve in her perilous kingdom.

Ellen Kushner

Thursday 9:00 p Mended Drum

SFWA Musketeers

Thursday 9:00 p ConCourse

Information Closes

Thursday 9:00 p Exeter

Open Filk

Thursday 9:00 p Gardner

Rendezvous

Thursday 9:00 p Hall A

Registration Closes

Thursday 9:00 p Hampton

Open Filk

Thursday 9:00 p Midway

Cartoon Jam

Joe Bergeron, Alexis Gilliland, Teddy Harvia, Bill Neville, John Zakour

Thursday 9:15 p Mended Drum

Fiddle Concert

April Grant

Thursday 9:30 p H205

The Science Fictional Sherlock Holmes

Carl William Thiel

Thursday 10:00 p H204

About "Silverlock"

Roundtable "footnoting" of the book....

Fred Lerner

Thursday 10:00 p H205

Win Tom Galloway's Money

If you liked "Win Ben Stein's Money," you'll love the (very, very frelly adapted) SF version. After all, Ben's game just can't compete with trivia categories like "That's Why Delaney Is a Tramp," "Running with Edward Scissorhands," and "I'm a Gaiman Fan -- not That There's Anything Wrong With That."

Keith R. A. DeCandido, Tom Galloway

Thursday 10:00 p H209

Hippocrene and Hyperspace: An Open Mike Poetry Reading

Named in honor of the poetry item at the 1963 Worldcon (Discon I), about which George Scithers later wrote "We were afraid that a bald announcement that we were going to have a poetry-reading session would scare off the audience....." Let's jam.

Thursday 10:00 p H210

On Venus Have We Got a Rabbi

....with the original intonations....

William Tenn

Thursday 10:00 p Art Show

Art Show Closes

Thursday 10:00 p Mended Drum

Discworld Songs

Songs inspired by Terry Pratchett's Discworld series. Performance and singalong.

Thursday 10:00 p Grand Ballroom

28 Days After

2004 Long Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Thursday 10:00 p Republic A

Blue Seed 1-5 [Subtitled]

Thursday 10:30 p H208

"The Lord of the Piercing" and "Gollum's Acceptance Speech"

Thursday 10:45 p Mended Drum

Concert

Rosemary Kirstein

Thursday 11:00 p

First Night Ends

Thursday 11:00 p H208

"The Very Secret Diaries": a Dramatic Reading

Thursday 11:00 p H209

Gundam Movie 1 [Subtitled]

Thursday 11:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Thursday 11:00 p Exeter

Rendezvous

Thursday 11:00 p Midway

Pictionary

Think of Charades, played by mute mental patients....it's somewhat (but not very) similar to water polo with scratchpads. It's the parlor game Satan makes Picasso play in Hell with Claude Degler. It's the shoulder-shaking epicenter of some of this con's largest laughquakes. Here -- wait -- let us DRAW you a description of that last one....

James Bacon (m), Mike Dashow, Joseph DeVito, Bob Eggleton, Teddy Harvia


Thursday 11:15 p Mended Drum

Concert

Terry Kitchen


Thursday 11:30 p Mended Drum

Concert by Bill & Brenda Sutton


Thursday 12:00 m Mended Drum

Concert

Pete Grubbs

Thursday 12:00 m Mended Drum

Concert by Pete Grubbs

Thursday 12:00 m Republic A

The Earthian 1 - 4 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Friday, September 3

Friday 0:27 a Mended Drum

Encore Game

Join us in this challenge to remember as many disctinct songs with lyrics matching a particular word or theme within the alloted time. Contestants or teams take turns until only one is left, then it's on to the next subject.

Friday 1:00 a Mended Drum

Encore Game

Friday 1:00 a Mended Drum

Last Call at the Mended Drum

Friday 1:00 a Exeter

Open Filk

Friday 2:00 a

Hynes Closes

Friday 2:00 a

Pedestrian Overpass to Marriott Closed

Friday 2:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Closes

Friday 2:30 a Republic A

Reign: The Conqueror 1-4 [Dubbed] [16 +]

Friday 3:00 a Conference

Filk Office Closes

Friday 8:00 a

Hynes Open for Setup Only

Friday 9:00 a

Hynes Opens

Friday 9:00 a Hall A

Registration Opens

Friday 9:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Open

Friday 9:00 a Republic A

Gatekeepers #1 - 4 [Dubbed] [13 +]

Friday 9:30 a

Childcare Opens

Friday 9:30 a H102

Rise Up Singing

Friday 9:30 a H203

Anglo-Saxon Influences on Modern Fantasy

The Rohirrim have a lot to answer for....

Debra Doyle

Friday 9:30 a Beacon A

Moving to Music [ages 1-7]

Clap and sing to the music of Jim Cosgrove, a Kansas City children's folk singer.

Friday 9:30 a Beacon F

Geometric Aliens [ages 2-6]

Fun foam, wiggle eyes, glue and you; what will be created?

Friday 9:30 a Conference

Filk Office Opens

Friday 9:30 a Exeter

Reading

Tamara Jones

Friday 9:30 a Hall A

Shotokan Karate Workshop

Kenn Bates, Keith G. Kato

Friday 10:00 a

Masquerade Registration Open

Friday 10:00 a H100

X-Bugs

Learn to play X-Bugs, SJ Games' combat tiddlywinks game. Your bugs are represented by plastic pieces that you flip across the table to capture enemy bugs. [2 players per game]

Friday 10:00 a H203

Ogres and Klingons and Orcs, Oh My!: The Changing Role of the Ogre in Popular Culture

Whoa there, big guy! Stop and let's have a look at you. Why did we loathe and fear you, but now think you're kind of cute? Are we unlearning racism? Are we softening our archetypes of aggression? What are you doing with that hamm--

Josepha Sherman

Friday 10:00 a H204

New England in Science Fiction and Fantasy

The locale of SF stories is often an important element of plot and style. LA, New York, London, New Orleans - these and other cities have served as the distinct locations in many stories. What about Boston and other places around New England? A lot of writers live in this region, but how do they use it in their stories? Does locating a story in Boston, Providence, rural Maine and so on make a distinct contribution to the look and feel of SF & fantasy plots? Or would a story set in this region have the same grounding if it was located anywhere else

Elizabeth Hand, Faye Ringel (m), Allen Steele

Friday 10:00 a H205

A Group Reading from the Thackery T. Lambshead Guide to Eccentric and Discredited Diseases

Join Drs. Cory Doctorov, Jay Lake, Paul DiFilippo, Liz Williams, and presiding physician Jeff VanderMeer for a brief "medial conference" on outlandish and ridiculous diseases, including props and giant microbes.

Paul DiFilippo, Cory Doctorow, Jay Lake, Jeff VanderMeer, Liz Williams

Friday 10:00 a H206

Welcome to the SF Community

An orientation seminar on the background of the World Science Fiction Convention and tips on making the most of the con.

Gay Haldeman (m), Mary Kay Kare, Laurie Mann, Roger Sims

Friday 10:00 a H208

Firefly Marathon, Episode 3-5

Friday 10:00 a H209

Molediver #1 [Subtitled]

Friday 10:00 a H210

WSFS Business Meeting, Preliminary Session

Open to all Worldcon members, the WSFS Business Meeting is where you can participate in the process of making and changing the official rules for the Hugo Awards and the selection of future Worldcons. Today's meeting is where we hear reports from committees, consider changes in the Standing Rules, and go through an initial round of setting debate times for amendments to the WSFS Constitution, and also where you can make nominations to the WSFS Mark Protection Committee. If there are items of buseiness you want discussed at the main meetings later in the convention, make sure you attend today's meeting to prevent it from being dismissed from the agenda.

Friday 10:00 a H301

Self-promotion and Publicity for Artists

You can't sell anything if people don't know you have it. How can artists tell people "they got it"? How can they get into the cover business, or make a hit in the fan world? What are the secrets? The mistakes

Irene Gallo, Jael, Karl Kofoed (m), Margaret Organ-Kean, Frank Wu

Friday 10:00 a H302

A Remedy for Future Shock

How can SF serve as a guide for us to help solve future dilemmas

David Gerrold, Walter H. Hunt, Larry A. Lebofsky (m), Ernest Lilley, Jack Speer

Friday 10:00 a H303

You Can't Take the Sky From Me....

...but can they take (your?) Serenity. Talk about the series and the movie....

Ginjer Buchanan, James S. Hinsey, MaryAnn Johanson, Priscilla Olson (m), Michelle Sagara West

Friday 10:00 a H305

Dr. Seuss Appreciation Panel

The late Springfield, Mass. writer/illustrator Theodore Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, created fantastic worlds where the Grinch stole Christmas, the Cat in the Hat could disrupt a household, Horton heard a Who, and Sneetches worried about whether they had stars on their Bellies. How do his surreal and amusing stories prepare young readers for the world of SF

Kathryn Cramer, Susan Fichtelberg, John F. Hertz, Beth Hilgartner, Kathleen Kudlinski (m)

Friday 10:00 a H306

Continuing the Series: A Dialogue

Suzy McKee Charnas, P. C. Hodgell

Friday 10:00 a H307

The Radio Play as an Ideal Form for SF (1.5 hours)

2 hours, allowing time for talk, listening, and discussion of same.

Paul Levinson

Friday 10:00 a H309

The Art of Alan Beck

Slide show.

Alan F. Beck

Friday 10:00 a H310

Highlights from the Hubble Space Telescope

A user of Hubble will report on the telescope's current status and explain the science behind the famous images. They're more than just pretty pictures.

Mike Brotherton

Friday 10:00 a H311

The Enchanted Apple: New York in SF and Fantasy

The very first history of New York City, written by Washington Irving (under the name ofDeitrich Knickerbocker) in 1809 was a work of fantasy. Since that time, NYC has appeared repeatedly in works of science fiction and fantasy. How has The City been portrayed? What makes it such a perfect locale for the fantabulist

Michael A. Burstein, Esther Friesner, George R. R. Martin, Madeleine E. Robins, Susan Shwartz (m)

Friday 10:00 a H312

SF Without Smiles

Is it possible to writegood or greaf SF/F/H that lacks an element of humor?. What examples come to mind? Or is deadly serious genre writing doomed to be just deadly

William C. Dietz, Scott Edelman (m), Barry N. Malzberg, Robert Sheckley, Gordon Van Gelder

Friday 10:00 a Art Show

Art Show Opens

Friday 10:00 a Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Friday 10:00 a Beacon D

Magic Show (7-12)

Daniel P. Dern

Friday 10:00 a Beacon F

Kitchen Science [ages 2-7]

Fun with things from the kitchen and some explanation on why they work.

Friday 10:00 a Clarendon

How to Train Tigers

Steven L. Lopata

Friday 10:00 a ConCourse

Site Selection Opens

Friday 10:00 a Dalton

Working with Unusual (Costuming) Materials

Not everything you work with comes from a fabric store. What other itmes might be really useful to help produce a first-rate costume

Pierre E. Pettinger, Sandra G. Pettinger

Friday 10:00 a Exeter

Reading

Don Sakers

Friday 10:00 a Gardner

Mars or Bust! (7-12)

An elementary school-level look at Mars. What is Mars like and why would we go there? What are we looking for? How do we get there? These questions are discussed with pictures, video and a 3-D look at the Spirit and Opportunity missions.

Steven Hammond

Friday 10:00 a Hall D

Dealers Opens

Friday 10:00 a Hampton

Reading

Carol Berg

Friday 10:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Glen Cook, Beth Meacham, Steve Miller, Mary H. Rosenblum

Friday 10:00 a Liberty A

Autism Spectrum Disorders Discussion Group (Eva Whitley)

Friday 10:30 a H203

Alienation: The Invisible Barrier in C.J. Cherryh's "Companions" (Stephanie Ryan Cate)

Friday 10:30 a H205

Selling Your Story to Hollywood

How do writers get Hollywood's attention? What is the process of trying to sell a story or novel to a film producer? And what happens when you d? Here's some insight into one of the more lucrative markets...and the most difficult to crack.

Sally Wiener Grotta

Friday 10:30 a H209

Molediver #2 [Subtitled]

Friday 10:30 a H304

The Beginning of Locus

Charles N. Brown, Anthony R. Lewis

Friday 10:30 a Art Show

April Grant, fiddler

April Grant

Friday 10:30 a Clarendon

Only Two Sexes

Melissa Scott

Friday 10:30 a Exeter

Reading

Rick Wilber

Friday 10:30 a Hampton

Reading

James Morrow

Friday 10:45 a Republic A

Gunparade March #1 - 4 [Dubbed]

Friday 11:00 a H100

Kill Dr. Lucky

Welcome to Dr. Lucky's mansion. Your mission is to kill a feeble old man named Dr. Lucky. Alas, you have to catch him first, but then you have to make sure there aren't any other witnesses. What's a guy with a grudge to do? Learn to play this hilarious game of strategy, deceit, and murder from Cheapass games. [6 players]

Friday 11:00 a H102

Filk Oldies Singalong

Sing songs from the NESFA Hymnals and other well-known filk sources with an experienced song-leader. Possibly your only chance to hear Banned from Argo at the Worldcon.

Lois H. Mangan

Friday 11:00 a H107

The Caves of Steel

A round-table discussion of the 1953 Retro Hugo nominated novel.

John F. Hertz

Friday 11:00 a H203

Running a Writing Workshop for Teens

As a set, teen writers are different from new writers. By designing and refining the Slpha SF/F/H Workshop for Young Writers, we've reinvented the Clarion Model in creative ways certain to be of interest to workshop coordinators, new writers, teens, parents and teachers.

Diane Turnshek

Friday 11:00 a H204

Building the Buzz

What makes one novel merely successful, and another a blockbuster best seller? Is it he buzz the latter generates? What make one book have buzz and another not? Can you cite examples? What kinds of buzz are there - and what is most effective at promoting a book? What can a publisher do to generate or enhance the buzz for a particular book

Jim Butcher, Craig Engler, Andrew Wheeler (m)

Friday 11:00 a H205

39 (Plus) Years of the X-Men

Once upon a time they were confused and frightened teenagers, some lead along by their hormones (remember the Scott-Jean-Warren love triangle?). Although the cast has changed over the years, a couple of well-done movies have only added to the appeal of the mutant guardians of humankind.. Why does the story of people who are different still resonate? And, since we know the subjectés going to come up, which characters who have been sidelined would you like to see come back

Keith R. A. DeCandido, Karen Haber, Steve Saffel, Barry Short (m)

Friday 11:00 a H206

Which Comes First: Character or Setting

Where do you start when you create fiction

Elizabeth Hand (m), Jean Lorrah, Louise Marley, Wen Spencer, Jeff VanderMeer

Friday 11:00 a H209

Molediver #3 [Subtitled]

Friday 11:00 a H301

What is Genre

Ellen Kushner has informed us about the recently formed website of the Interstitial Arts Foundation A browse shows lots of great reading and fiercely intelligent discussion on a range of topics that span literature, art, music and performance which cannot easily be classified by conventional genre boundaries or any boundaries at all. We will skip the paradox of such "interstitial arts" forming its own genre and cut to the chase. What does it mean to be part of a "genre"? If you don't fit comfortably in SF or fantasy or horror or mainstream or fiction/nonfiction, where do they file you in the bookstore? What is the larger cultural significance of crossover material? What does it imply for the future of SF literature? Who is writing stories that fall between the cracks

Ellen Asher, Jay Caselberg (m), James Minz, Takayuki Tatsumi, Carrie Vaughn

Friday 11:00 a H302

The Future of Love

In homage to a panel of the same name from the 1953 Worldcon in Philadelphia. OK....so, what is it? And what about relationships.....marriages? Same-sex marriage, polyamory, Heinlein line marriages, Gor-type relationships ... Is there anything we haven't already tried? Are we a good enough sample to disprove the theory that these things will cause the collapse of civilization

Stephen Dedman, Bey King, Sue Krinard (m), Mary Anne Mohanraj, Mark W. Tiedemann

Friday 11:00 a H303

Remembering Seacon '79

The real truths behind the Brighton 1979 Worldcon, chaired by one of our fan guests 25 years ago.....

Peter Weston

Friday 11:00 a H304

Locus Awards

Charles N. Brown (m), Lois McMaster Bujold, Cory Doctorow, Gardner Dozois, Neil Gaiman, Michael Whelan, Connie Willis

Friday 11:00 a H305

How Workshopping Works/A Public Hanging

The Cambridge Science Fiction Writers Workshop, one of the oldest in the country, discussed how it works and does a live demo....watch them deconstruct a story in all their snarky splendor!

James Cambias, F. Brett Cox, Theodora Goss, James Patrick Kelly, Kelly Link, Vandana Singh

Friday 11:00 a H306

Social World Building

"World building" in SF usually connotes care paid to ecological, astronomical and biological factors influencing the nature of other worlds in which stories take place - in short, the physical backstory. But if other worlds are different from Earth, so are likely to be the social systems of sentient species on them, including future humans. What should you think about when considering the sociological background of stories set in the future or on other planets? SF writers traditionally took for granted that mid-20th century American norms would prevail everywhere, but we know better - don't we? The panel will consider matters of kinship, marriage, family, religion and other modes of relationship patterns that vary more widely than many realize here and now, let along then and there.

Carol Berg, Judith Berman, Robert J. Sawyer, Karl Schroeder (m), Martha Wells

Friday 11:00 a H309

Space Weather Forecasting

Space weather is already a concern, as solar storms disrupt communications. Will travelers to Mars have to predict radiation blizzards months in advance? What is the state of the art

Janet Catherine Johnston

Friday 11:00 a H310

They Gave It a Hugo: What on Earth Were They Thinking

Sure, it's easy to slam They'd Rather Be Right, but name a few more that fit the bill.....Why did they win

Justin Ackroyd, Moshe Feder, Gregory Feeley, Andrew Porter (m), Robert Silverberg

Friday 11:00 a H311

What Should Good Fantasy Do

Should it inspire, teach, intimidate, educate? How about divert, relax, amuse, or awaken? The panelists will choose their own verbs - and in the process, explain how good fantasy differs from not-so-good fantasy.

Daniel Abraham (m), John Clute, Justine Larbalestier, Laura Underwood

Friday 11:00 a H312

You want to do WHAT with my genes

What good and bad can come of genome editing and genetic engineering. Genome editing is the merging of natural and existing genomes with others and artificial genetic material, in order to create new species, Genetic engineering is the addition and changing of specific traits in individual species. imagine a tiny perfect Bengal tiger, or a miniature pet elephant. How about a dog as smart as a monkey. What types of genetic engineering may be applied to humans? What are the personal, social and ethical implications for people and animals

Catherine Asaro, Zara Baxter (m), Nancy Kress, Mary H. Rosenblum, Janine Ellen Young

Friday 11:00 a Art Show

Art Show Tour (Mark Ferrari)

Friday 11:00 a Autographing

Autographing

Elizabeth Caldwell, Suzy McKee Charnas, Laura Anne Gilman, Thomas Harlan, Laurie J. Marks, Deborah Ross, Darrell Schweitzer

Friday 11:00 a Beacon A

HoverDisc Games [ages 3-6] (Steven Chalker)

Don't know what a HoverDisc is? Come and find out; you'll be hooked.

Friday 11:00 a Beacon D

Alien World Building (7-12)

Discussion of alien environments and bodies. Then make your own alien and environment and describe them for the group.

Walter H. Hunt, Amy Thomson

Friday 11:00 a Beacon F

Pudding Finger Paint [ages 1-5]

Friday 11:00 a Clarendon

Cartoon Guilty Pleasures

Let's see some hands: Even though you talk knowledgeably about the latest episode of hip shows like "South Park" or "Justice League," do you furtively watch "Scooby Doo"? "The Wild Thornberrys"? "Recess"? Any show featuring Archie & his friends? What's appealing for adults in these shows aimed at kids? Is it a return to simpler times, positive actions, or something more

Blind Lemming Chiffon, Pam Fremon (m), Kimberly Ann Kindya, Pamela Scoville, Gary K. Wolf

Friday 11:00 a Dalton

Developing the Deryni Game: a Writer's Perspective

Katherine Kurtz

Friday 11:00 a Exeter

Reading

Rebecca Moesta

Friday 11:00 a Gardner

So, You Want to be a Rocket Scientist? (7-12)

The universe is a big, exciting place (at least scientifically speaking). Come share the thrill of it with other science-types, as they demystify relativity, and other sciences.

Carl Frederick, G. David Nordley

Friday 11:00 a Hampton

Reading

Simon R. Green

Friday 11:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeelatsch

Joe Haldeman, Yves Meynard, James Stevens-Arce, Charles Stross

Friday 11:00 a Liberty A

Ham Radio Discussion

Friday 11:00 a Liberty C

Pagan Discussion Group

Friday 11:00 a Republic B

Angel: 1945

Friday 11:00 a Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon)

Suford Lewis

Friday 11:30 a H209

Molediver #4 [Subtitled]

Friday 11:30 a H307

Psychological Aspects of the Babylon 5 Universe

David McMahon

Friday 11:30 a Con Suite Foyer

Mary Crowell, pianist

Mary Crowell

Friday 11:30 a Dalton

Space Opera as Geopolitical Melodrama

Daniel Hatch

Friday 11:30 a Exeter

Reading

Janny Wurts

Friday 11:30 a Hall A

Music

Mary Crowell

Friday 11:30 a Hampton

Reading

P. C. Hodgell

Friday 12:00 n H100

Dinohunt

Learn to play Dinohunt, SJ Games' game of time travel and dinosaur hunting. [6 players]

Friday 12:00 n H102

Oldies Singalong

Friday 12:00 n H107

What's New From DAw

A presentation of the upcoming schedule and a Q&A with DAW editors and authors. Moderated by Debra Euler, Managing Editor.

Friday 12:00 n H203

Novel Educational Approaches

In the past three academic years, a group of second-grade students have been taught a mixture of karate and science. What was tried and how well did this mixed instruction seem to work? Student notebooks and other items will be available for view.

Keith G. Kato

Friday 12:00 n H204

Researching Your Story: When Do You Quit

The family tree covers three sheets; the glossary needs extensive cross references; the map has 16 color codes. Have you overdone it, or is this all necessary to provide verisimilitude? And haven't we all read stories where the writer go so involved with building the world that the story got lost? Learn when to drop the books and pick up the pen.

Lisa Barnett, Suzanne Alles Blom, Elizabeth Caldwell, Jack L. Chalker, Sheila Finch (m), Steven L. Lopata

Friday 12:00 n H205

The World Map of 2100 - what does it look like

The map of Europe has been redrawn several times in recent decades; many people have the experience of being born in one country, growing up in another and dying in a third without ever having moved. There is no reason to think this process will stop. If you could see a a world map of 2100, what's familiar, what isn't? united Europe? disunited US? Canada still there? rearranged Africa? internet/virtual communities more important than geographic ones? regional ecotopias? corporate empires

David McMahon, Patrick Nielsen Hayden, S. M. Stirling, Scott Westerfeld, Jim Young (m)

Friday 12:00 n H206

Welcome to the SF Community: Making Connections

Now that you're here, here's how to meet people, get involved, and learn to understand our eccentric community!

Norman Cates, Nicki Lynch, Bill Sutton (m), Toni Weisskopf

Friday 12:00 n H209

Molediver #5 [Subtitled]

Friday 12:00 n H301

Character Development for Everyone

It isn't just writers who develop characters. Artists, costumers and gamers also need these skills. People who use characters in different media discuss how they go about it.

Susan de Guardiola, Sharon Lee (m), Bill Neville, Laura Resnick, Melissa Scott

Friday 12:00 n H302

SF: Fun or Spinach

Is it good for you? A discussion of escapism vs. relevance in fiction.

Ellen Asher, John R. Douglas (m), Esther Friesner, Fruma Klass

Friday 12:00 n H303

Fandom in the Fifties

What was fandom like a half-century ago

Juanita Coulson, David A. Kyle, Hank Reinhardt, Roger Sims (m)

Friday 12:00 n H304

The Future of Forensic Evidence

DNA evidence proves the guy on Death Row didn't do it. On CSI, they finger a killer by the heat trace he left behind. But - can this evidence be tampered with? How do real everyday science advances change the way the criminal justice system works, and what's the outlook for the future? How far can forensics go before we have the Precrime cops from Minority Report stopping homicides before they happen? What comes in between - and is it all good

Genny Dazzo, Matthew Jarpe, Robert I. Katz (m), Paul Levinson

Friday 12:00 n H305

How to Become Invisible

From fairy tales to H.G. Wells, we have always loved stories about people becoming invisible. Our panel discusses a variety of ways, scientific and silly, that humans might accomplish this wonder. Join this exercise in creative thinking.

Michael A. Burstein (m), Dave Clements, Howard Davidson, Robert A. Metzger

Friday 12:00 n H306

Archetypes in Fantasy: The Princess, Alone

Who is she, and why is she alone? How can she ever find her way out of the Tower

Diane Duane, Justine Larbalestier, Michelle Sagara West (m), Jo Walton, Paul Witcover

Friday 12:00 n H307

Restoration Ecology

Ecology, and practical approaches to small-scale land and wildlife management....and why it matters

Elizabeth Moon (m)

Friday 12:00 n H309

The Art of Martina Pilcerova

Martina Pilcerova

Friday 12:00 n H310

Asteroids: Friends or Foes

Astronomers are now tracking hundreds of asteroids bigger than a kilometer which could potentially hit the Earth with minor changes in their orbits. They continue discovering new potentially hazardous objects, and sometimes their predictions warn of possible collisions within the next century. What does this mean, and how much should we worry about it? What kind of objects should we be looking for, and what can we do if we see one on its way toward us? How should astronomers keep the public and governments informed

Richard Binzel

Friday 12:00 n H311

The Future of Short Fiction (and the Magazines)

OK....it wouldn't be a Worldcon without this item, would it? The big pro magazines have been losing circulation steadily for many years. The original anthology market is a shadow of its former self. Yet new magazines keep popping up, and some publish a few impressive issues. Is short fiction becoming a hobby? And what does that mean when publishing short fiction is often considered a vital step on the way to publishing novels

John Betancourt, Nicholas A. DiChario, Gardner Dozois, Stanley Schmidt (m), Gordon Van Gelder, Sheila Williams

Friday 12:00 n H312

Modernism and Sf

Modernism -- Faulkner, Joyce, Eliot, Pound, CaBell -- was the dominant literary mode when modern science fiction had its formative period during the 1930s and early 1940s. What unappreciated influences did it exert over the evolving pulp genre

Gregory Feeley, Eileen Gunn (m), David G. Hartwell, James Morrow

Friday 12:00 n Autographing

Autographing

Tobias Buckell, Barbara Chepaitis, Peter J. Heck, Rosemary Kirstein, Larry Niven

Friday 12:00 n Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Friday 12:00 n Beacon D

Geometric Origami (Jenny Mosely, Elsa Chen) (7-12)

Learn origami with a master origamist. Jenny specializes in geometric shapes rather than animals, and has been a GOH at a Japanese origami convention.

Friday 12:00 n Beacon F

Stamping [ages 1-12]

Stamping is so much fun. Paper and creativity will help you make a great card, stationary, or bookmark to take home with you.

Friday 12:00 n Dalton

The Artemis Project

Commercial space travel

Ian Randal Strock

Friday 12:00 n Exeter

Reading

Mindy Klasky

Friday 12:00 n Gardner

Making a Poly-Shrink Pin (Kids Only! -- 7-12)

Design and make a pin with the instruction of an expert.

Elizabeth Janes

Friday 12:00 n Hampton

Reading

Jon Courtenay Grimwood

Friday 12:00 n ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Thomas Harlan, Tamora Pierce, George H. Scithers, Allen Steele

Friday 12:00 n Liberty A

Mensa Discussion Group (Muriel Hykes)

Friday 12:00 n Republic B

Buffy: Chosen

Short Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Friday 12:30 p H209

Molediver #6 [Subtitled]

Friday 12:30 p H307

H.G. Wells: Plagiarist

Bradford Lyau

Friday 12:30 p Dalton

Working on Graphic Novels

Colleen Doran

Friday 12:30 p Exeter

Reading

Daniel Abraham

Friday 12:30 p Hampton

Reading

Kevin J. Anderson

Friday 12:30 p Republic A

The Special Duty Combat Unit: Shinesman [Dubbed]

Friday 1:00 p H203

The Two Cultures in F&SF: Science Confronts the Humanities

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

Ctein (m), Matthew Jarpe, Nancy Kress, Justine Larbalestier

Friday 1:00 p H204

Interactive Fiction: The Nexus of Storytelling, Simulation and AI in Video Games

Video games have traditionally been abstract or linear. Games that use traditional storytelling media increase the immersion by providing the player with some kind of ownership or emotional attachment. However, the players themselves have had little choice in their storylines and a limited palette of emotional experience. That's changing. More recently, games have allowed users to create their own stories, or have been more open-ended with limited plots giving the player the ability to create his or her own narrative. Explore these ideas!

K. A. Bedford, Mike Dashow, Clarinda Merripen (m), Joe Pearce

Friday 1:00 p H205

The Two Sides of Gollum

Gollum is unique; there's nobody quite like him in fantasy. (Or, is there?) And in many ways, he's the true tragic figure of The Lord of the Rings, evoking at times anger, contempt, and pity from the readers. The panel looks at the character of Gollum (whether Stinker or Slinker) and how he fits into Tolkien's world and Tolkien's story.

Greer Gilman, Daniel Grotta, Darrell Schweitzer, Brenda Sutton, Ann Tonsor Zeddies (m)

Friday 1:00 p H206

A Worldcon Orientation for SF Professionals

Time was, most pros came out of fandom and therefore had long-standing links of friendship to a variety of fans, besides an understanding of fannish perspective. Increasingly, not only don't SF writers come out of fandom, but they're not very interested in it except as it affect their bottom line. This ignorance can hurt -- both the pro and the fan community. So, what should every pro know about fandom? Get the lowdown on how to get the most out of the convention circuit -- without harming your reputation. Learn how to find your way through the maze of publisher parties, conventions, fannish traditions, and more (even if you're painfully shy). Highly recommended for the "neo-pro," or for anyone wanting to reduce the widening gulf between pros and fans.....

Janice Gelb, Gay Haldeman, David Levine, Priscilla Olson (m), Toni Weisskopf

Friday 1:00 p H208

"Metal Tears" - Film and Discussion

Watch this short film, based on the Hugo-nominated short story "Robots Don't Cry" and discuss how it came about.

Mike Resnick

Friday 1:00 p H209

GunBuster Vol. 1 [Subtitled]

Friday 1:00 p H210

The Fannish Inquisition

Meet the bidders for the 2007 and future Worldcons.

Patrick Molloy (m)

Friday 1:00 p H301

15 Years of "The Simpsons"

It's now one of the longest-running TV shows, and shows no sign of slowing down. (Maybe that's because someone always seems to be chasing them, for something they shouldn't have done. There are *still* a few states that haven't yet run the family out.) How does the show manage to stay fresh? Is it the large number of characters? The loose sense of location? The fact that their family looks like ours? (Don't we *all* have a Homer and a Lisa?) What subjects would we still like them to cover? Should Skinner and Edna tie the knot? And do we think Bart *will* someday become Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

Michael A. Burstein (m), Pam Fremon, Daniel Kimmel

Friday 1:00 p H302

The Business of Screenwriting Big and Small

Is it true a writer can make more money and have more fun behind the screen? (And would that be the big or little screen?) If not, why are so many people drawn to screenwriting? Does writing for TV differ from writing for movies? In terms of money, time, censorship. and subject matter, which is more rewarding? Easier to break into? Easier to actually make a living out of

David Gerrold, Craig Miller (m), Nick Sagan, Steven Sawicki, Isaac Szpindel

Friday 1:00 p H303

Is your "First Novel" a First Novel

So, you think the first novel you finish is your first novel, but is it? Could it be a third or fourth novel as far as an editor is concerned. Come learn how to write a first novel from folks who've written several among their many novels.

Phyllis Eisenstein, Terry McGarry, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe (m), Scott Westerfeld

Friday 1:00 p H304

Looking Backward: the 20th Century

It was a time of terrible wars and great evils and unparalleled progress, ending with democracy triumphant, right? Well... It was also the time of Milton Berle and cheese Whiz, love beads and Elvis, andāOK, so will the writers and fans of the late 21st century look back on the 20th with nostalgia, with surprise, or with horror? How will people in far future times look at us? Imagine what things about the 20th century that those in the future will look back on in the same way as we view the Roman gladiators...

Esther Friesner (m), Craig Gardner, Terry Pratchett, John Scalzi

Friday 1:00 p H305

Adapting Traditional Japanese Garments to SF/F Costumes

Kimberly Ann Kindya

Friday 1:00 p H306

People for the Ethical Treatment of Mars

The Ethics of Terraforming...Do rocks have rights? Should we terraform Mars? Give it an atmosphere, five it life, make it a home for people. Is this something we ought to do? What would the impact of terraforming be on Martian extremophiles, if they exist? Should we change it to the detriment of the native life? (And, if it's lifeless, does a rocky Moon-like Mars have a claim that we can't brush aside?) What would a terraformed Mars provide to the human race, in general? Should the demands of a few determine the destiny of many

Guy Consolmagno, D. Douglas Fratz, James Killus, Mark L. Olson (m)

Friday 1:00 p H307

Recovering from Oops!

The Fed Ex man will be here in a hour -- but you just put a blotch in the middle of the painting -- what do you do? Like cats, artists are experts in making it look like that's what they meant to do all along. Find out how artists fix what seems unfixable

N. Taylor Blanchard (m), Mike Conrad, Ed Cox, Margaret Organ-Kean, Martina Pilcerova

Friday 1:00 p H309

Affectionate Technology: The Art & Science of David Durlach

Can technology development and emotions like grace and kindness be allies? That's the belief of David Durlach, who runs a high-tech design studio that combines his fascination with artistic expression, human emotion and human relations with technology. Durlach will explain his philosophy of "arffectionate technology" and how it is implemented in computer-controlled kinetic artworks, education exhibits, and commercial attractions that have been displayed around the country.

David Durlach, Dennis Livingston (m)

Friday 1:00 p H310

The Cassini Mission

NASA's Cassini spacecraft went into orbit around Saturn on June 30 and will continue exploring the Saturn system during Noreascon. This is the first spacecraft to visit the ringed planet since Voyager 2 passed through in 1981. What has it already learned? What more will it learn during its four-year mission to Saturn and Titan? What more do we want to know? What's next? It's another neat space stuff panel.

Jeff Hecht, Bill Higgins, Geoffrey A. Landis, Larry A. Lebofsky, Carolyn Collins Petersen

Friday 1:00 p H311

One Day in the Life of an Editor

An hour by hour account of what an editor actually does. It's 11:00 a.m. - do you know where your manuscript is

Tina Beychok, Ellen Datlow, Scott Edelman, Jim Grimsley, Sheila Williams (m)

Friday 1:00 p H312

My Worst Story - and why I wrote it

Stinkers can be therapeutic. Share!

William Tenn, Frederik Pohl (m), Robert J. Sawyer

Friday 1:00 p Art Show

Ellen James, harpist

Edward James

Friday 1:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Jay Caselberg, Vera Nazarian, Susan Shwartz, James Stevens-Arce, S. M. Stirling, Cecilia Tan

Friday 1:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Jeffrey A. Carver, Joe Haldeman, Lee Martindale

Friday 1:00 p Beacon A

Playground Games [ages 4-7]

Play basic rule games in a more organized manner than open playtime (Duck, Duck, Goose; Animal Tag; Simon Says, etc)

Friday 1:00 p Beacon D

Drawing and Painting (7-12)

Try your hand at creating an original cover for your favorite book.

Don Maitz

Friday 1:00 p Beacon F

Make Your Own Journal [ages 4-7]

Want to remember the special things about Noreascon 4? This fun journal will give you place to write, draw, or put a picture to keep those memories forever.

Friday 1:00 p Clarendon

Juried One-Shots

Sign up in the filk office. Four persons or groups willhave 13 minutes each to perform and get feedback from a panel of judges with various areas of expertise. Performances should be 5 minutes or less. Criticism will be constructive.

Friday 1:00 p ConCourse

Fan History Tour

Laurie Mann

Friday 1:00 p Dalton

The Interstitial Arts Movement

Ellen Kushner, Delia Sherman

Friday 1:00 p Exeter

Reading

Keith R. A. DeCandido

Friday 1:00 p Gardner

Make Your Own Rapiers (7-12)

Make and decorate the sword you'll use in the swordplay hour coming up next.

Persis Thorndike

Friday 1:00 p Hampton

Reading

Charles Stross

Friday 1:00 p Independence

Shadowrun RPG: First Shot at the Big Time

Your chance at the big time: A friend has tipped you off about a job opportunity to do some bodyguard work for a group of exclusive clientele.. You have been trying to break into the Seattle shadow scene, and these are just the kind of people that can help. All you have to do is make sure that their meeting doesn't get interrupted. It's a simple walk in the park, natch! [Make your own character up to 10 Karma, or use a pre-generated character. 6 players]

Friday 1:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

John Clute, Kathleen Kudlinski, Louise Marley, Walter Jon Williams

Friday 1:00 p Liberty C

Alternative Housing Discussion Group (Dave Van Deusen)

Friday 1:00 p Republic B

Gollum's Acceptance Speech at the 2003 MTV Music Awards

Short Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Friday 1:04 p Republic B

Firefly: Heart of Gold

Short Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Friday 1:30 p H100

Cheapass Games Tournament

This tournament will feature the following games: Brawl, Gimme the Brain, Girl Genius: The Works, and Kill Dr. Lucky. Players will rotate between games. You must sign up by Friday, 1 p.m. Sign up at either game room. Each players plays each game once

Friday 1:30 p H305

How History is Filtered

Herb Kauderer

Friday 1:30 p Dalton

Airships: A Dialog

James Cambias, Thomas Kidd

Friday 1:30 p Exeter

Reading

Jim Frenkel

Friday 1:30 p Hampton

Reading

Elizabeth Moon

Friday 1:30 p Republic A

Slayers: The Movie [Dubbed] [12 +]

Friday 2:00 p H100

Blood and Cardstock Players Choice

Open demo session. Learn to play exciting games like Showbiz and Counting ZZZs.

Friday 2:00 p H100

Game Demo

Leigh Grossman

Friday 2:00 p H107

SETI Update

In the decade since Congress abruptly terminated the NASA SETI Program, the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence has proved itself the science that refuses to die. This update on SETI privatization describes what thousands of ordinary SETIzens all over our planet are doing to hasten humanity's entry into the Galactic Community

H. Paul Shuch

Friday 2:00 p H203

Imagine That! Science Fiction as a Learning Motivation

Slide show

Val Ontell

Friday 2:00 p H204

The Rediscovery of Cordwainer Smith

A few years ago, Gardner Dozois observed that many of the hot new writers of the 1990s had never read the works of Cordwainer Smith. How is that possible? Why do Smith's stories need to be rediscovered -- and what makes them worthy of rediscovery? Cone by and discover (or rediscover) why "Smith's" unique voice sounds stronger, stranger, and more cotemporary than most SF published today -- or tomorrow.

Ellen Asher, Geary Gravel, Anthony R. Lewis (m), Jacob Weisman, Jim Young

Friday 2:00 p H205

Girl Power - Anime Style

Christine Carpenito, Kimberly Ann Kindya (m), Mari Kotani, Timothy Liebe

Friday 2:00 p H206

Storytelling Workshop

Storytelling plays a significant role in SF/fantasy literature, in the form of characters who gather you around the campfire, and at cons, where authors' readings could be considered a form of telling stories. Ah, but there's an art to it and here's the place to find out more - especially for fans who would like to specialize telling or performing SF/fantasy influenced tales, original or not. Discussion, demonstration, and workshop.

Barbara Chepaitis

Friday 2:00 p H208

Reading/Film

Resa Nelson

Friday 2:00 p H209

GunBuster Vol. 2 [Subtitled]

Friday 2:00 p H210

Filk Request Concert

Friday 2:00 p H301

The New Recycling Universe

An alternative to Big Bang cosmology....

John G. Cramer

Friday 2:00 p H302

Plot and Pace

A story needs to balance both the plot of the story and the pace of the revelation to keep the reader interested. Come learn how to do this critical balancing act in your own work.

Alison Baird, Stephen Dedman, James Alan Gardner (m), Jay Lake, Sean M. Mead, Uncle River

Friday 2:00 p H303

The Well-Read Fanzine Fan

Both paper and on-line, what should the well-read fanzine fan know about (both past and present)? Why'd you pick that one

Juanita Coulson, John-Henri Holmberg, Guy H. Lillian (m), Joe Siclari, Steven H. Silver

Friday 2:00 p H304

Kennedy Survives Dallas - Then what

It's Boston, it's 40+ years since Dallas, politics abounds - how can we not do this? This panel takes for granted an alternative past to explore an alternative present - what if JFK was not killed at Dallas? What does the present look like? For example: the base on Mars is now 10 years old. Bobby Kennedy was impeached for violating civil liberties. what Vietnam war? Who would the parties be nominating this year? Once you change one fundamental aspect of the past, how do you spell out the ripples through the near future? Orāis history so chaotic that thirty years later much of the detail of life would be unpredictably different?....or not much changed at all

Mitchell Freedman, Joseph T. Major, Mike Resnick, Shane Tourtellotte (m)

Friday 2:00 p H305

Mental Floss - Emotional Hygiene to Help Writers & Artists Stay Sane

Creativity takes a huge toll of the psyche, never mind the ego reeling from critiques and rejections. You'll last a lot longer if you learn to put it all in perspective, and tune out your critics when necessary.

Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Rebecca Moesta, Deborah Ross (m), Josepha Sherman, Martha Wells

Friday 2:00 p H306

Nukes on the Moon?!

What if Cold War US military plans (circa 1960) to place nuclear armed missiles on the Moon had been carried out? How would this have changed the course of space exploration in the Twentieth Century? Would there have been a Lunar Missile Crisis as well as a Cuban one

Robert Buettner, John G. Hemry, David McMahon, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe (m), Karen Traviss

Friday 2:00 p H307

Game Crack

Addicted to games to the exclusion of life...friends....bathing? How do you get your life back

Chris French, W. Randy Hoffman (m), David R. Howell, Joe Pearce, Lisa J. Steele

Friday 2:00 p H309

The Art of Karl Kofoed

Karl Kofoed

Friday 2:00 p H310

The MIT Media Lab: A Visit From the Future

What's cookin' at the Media Lab? MIT's well known research organization has garnered a reputation as a leading-edge center for developments in machine understanding, affective computing, advanced interface design, nanomedia, silicon biology and digital expression, among other fields, that may influence how we use technology in the years ahead - not to mention provide fertile ideas for science fiction stories. This panel features presentations from Lab researchers on a sample of current activities.

Bill Higgins, Marvin Minsky, Sandy Pentland

Friday 2:00 p H311

Cyber-Crime: Present and Future

A panel about the explosion of cyber-crime. Include the sophisticated Brazilian hackers, the Asian Virus makers spammers (porn, sex aids, medication, etc), and so on.. Bill Gates pledged to wipe out spam within two years and the big Internet companies are uniting to fight spam in the courts and cyberspace. What is the future of cyber-crime and the abuse of the Internet -- and what steps might be taken to control this? Will we one day have that massive cyber attack that literally brings the world to its knees

Charles Ardai, Michael Benveniste (m), Harold Feld, Charlie Petit

Friday 2:00 p H312

The Long and Short of It: Short Stories vs. Novels

According to the bestseller lists, the most popular works among American readers seem to be long novels. And yet, short stories lften seem to linger in people's memories much more intensely. What's the "ideal" length for a work of science fiction or fantasy? (And how is this determined?) What are the advantages and disadvantages of the two forms

Nicholas A. DiChario, Jay Caselberg (m), William Tenn, David Marusek, Robert Reed, Sarah Zettel

Friday 2:00 p Autographing

Autographing

M. M. Buckner, William C. Dietz, Joe Haldeman, Katherine Kurtz, Don Sakers, Steven Sawicki, Gary K. Wolf

Friday 2:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Mary Anne Mohanraj, Rick Wilber

Friday 2:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Friday 2:00 p Beacon D

Mask Making (7-12)

Make a mask. Then tell us the story behind it.

Ming Diaz

Friday 2:00 p Beacon F

Drawing and Painting with Don Maitz [ages 3-6]

Talk about making a cover picture for your favorite story, then color it to take home.

Friday 2:00 p Clarendon

Harp Workshop

Sound and look like an angel. Hang with the harpist and find out if the harp is for you, or share techniques to play your harp better.

Edward James

Friday 2:00 p Con Suite Foyer

Music

Friday 2:00 p Dalton

Secret Societies

We could describe this panel but then we'd have to kill you....

Walter H. Hunt

Friday 2:00 p Exeter

Reading

Eileen Gunn

Friday 2:00 p Gardner

Fencing and Swordfighting (7-12)

Learn some of the moves that make swashbuckling movies so great with a SWFA musketeer.

Melanie Fletcher

Friday 2:00 p Grand Ballroom

Regency Dance

No experience necessary! Relive the English Regency as it appeared in the novels of Georgette Heyer. Dance, play cards, gossip, discuss Jane Austen. Dancing will be taught and called by our Dancemaster, John Hertz - you do not need to know how to dance. There will be rules & strategy sheets for several card games, a Whist Master and several Vingt- et-Un Masters. Costume appreciated but not required.

Friday 2:00 p Hampton

Reading (1 hour)

Lois McMaster Bujold

Friday 2:00 p Independence

Wildside Gaming System: Fantasy Roleplaying System

Learn to play this exciting, new RPG system. A flexible, innovative, ultra-realistic role-playing system designed for adult and experienced gamers, the Wildside Fantasy Roleplaying System combines realistic and logical character development and combat with accurate historical elements.

Friday 2:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Sheila Finch, Paul Levinson, Michelle Sagara West, Amy Thomson

Friday 2:00 p Liberty A

Christian Fandom

Friday 2:00 p Republic B

Firefly: The Message

Short Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Friday 2:00 p Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon) - Jim Hudson

Friday 2:30 p H210

Filk One-Shots Concert

Friday 2:30 p H301

Physics vs. Fiction

Discussion of the differences between looking at science as a working scientist, vs. looking at it as a science fiction writer.

David Stephenson

Friday 2:30 p Dalton

Parrot Intelligence

Shariann Lewitt

Friday 2:30 p Exeter

Reading

Janine Ellen Young

Friday 3:00 p H100

HeroClix Tournament

Bring your favorite superheroes and battle others in this Wizkids sanctioned tournament.

,

Friday 3:00 p H107

The Work of Edgar Pangborn

Was it the philosophy and optimism of "A Mirror for Observers"? Or his sexy paean to a simpler, post-holocaust medieval world in "Davy"? Let's consider how Pangborn (1909-1976) became among the most beloved yet barely-read SF/fantasy writers of the 20th century. Where should you start

Gregory Feeley

Friday 3:00 p H203

Teaching Science With Science Fiction

Many of today's scientists were inspired to start their careers by science fiction, but how effective is SF in introducing science to a non-science oriented student? How effective are SF conventions as venues for presenting science to the public? Which books work best in conveying not only the facts of science, but how science is actually done? What strategies work best in a typical college classroom? Which authors are most popular with the students? Which books just "don't work"

Guy Consolmagno, Bill Higgins, Larry A. Lebofsky

Friday 3:00 p H204

The Effects of Pervasive Technology

What effects (real of imagined) have various electronic technologies had on social/political structures/interactions, and on economics/markets? (Whew.....)

Marc Gordon, Eric Landau (m), W. A. Thomasson, James M. Turner

Friday 3:00 p H205

A Fragmentation of Fans

An examination of the background (and continued growth) of the separation of the fannish community into separate fandoms. From the SCA to Costumecons, and early comics fandom to filk convention......what's going on, why, and what will be the outcome

Mary Kay Kare, Priscilla Olson (m), Don Sakers

Friday 3:00 p H206

The King Kong Thing

Lord of the Rings director Peter Jackson's schedule for 2005 includes release of his new film about the world's most lovable big ape. Will his take automatically become the alpha version? What's the charm in this story anyway

Joseph DeVito, Bob Eggleton, Daniel Kimmel, Mark R. Leeper

Friday 3:00 p H209

GunBuster Vol. 3 [Subtitled]

Friday 3:00 p H210

Concert

Lynn Gold

Friday 3:00 p H301

Anatomy of the Unicorn

How do you persuade someone that a unicorn or dragon is real - and you've had one posing in your studio? Basing imaginary animals on realistic animal anatomy is a common method, but if you follow it too closely, all you get is an extra large chameleon of a horse with a horn. Just how and where do you introduce the necessary element of the unusual and the fantastic

Joe Bergeron, Karl Kofoed, Karen Purcell (m), Omar Rayyan, Frank Wu

Friday 3:00 p H302

The Character of Death

Death personified appears in a number of works. Just who is this character, and why do writers use him/her/it? Can Death be sympathetic? (YES.)

P. C. Hodgell, Tanya Huff, Beth Meacham (m), James Morrow, Terry Pratchett

Friday 3:00 p H303

All About Agents

Are they necessary? How do you find the right one? What do you have to know to keep from getting scammed-and how can they actually protect you (if you're lucky)

Joshua Bilmes (m), Charlie Petit, George H. Scithers, Eleanor Wood

Friday 3:00 p H304

Mars is for Robots

Since the Viking landers more than a quarter century ago, robots have been our surrogate explorers on other worlds. They're cost-effective, don't need air, water, or food, and can send back lots of data. Many scientists argue we should be sending robots rather than people to explore Mars. (We should have one on the panel). Others worry that manned spaceflight will drain money NASA needs for unmanned science missions. With current technology, maybe sending people to Mars is just a budget-busting extravaganza with little possible scientific return.

Richard Binzel, N. Taylor Blanchard, Geoffrey A. Landis, Jonathan McDowell, Henry Spencer (m)

Friday 3:00 p H305

Online Journaling

Why do we live our private lives in public places? Are we merely enotional exhibitionists, or are we continuing ( in a different form) the vernerable art of journaling. Sure, it's also a great way to network, but what can journaling do for you? Or, TO you? As more and more people do it everyday, is it turning into a problem

Vera Nazarian

Friday 3:00 p H306

The Future of the Future

The future looks different to many of us now than it did just a few years ago To what degree is the concept of an open, freely imagined future under attack in our own culture, from either the right of the left. To what degree have larger cultural currents affected the SF portrayal of the future? And how does SF imagine its own future, or is it, too, stuck in a cycle of recurrence, of hankering for a restoration of its own golden Age? What is the outlook for the future

Elizabeth Bear, Judith Berman (m), Daniel Hatch, Dennis Livingston, Walter Jon Williams

Friday 3:00 p H307

Edged Weapons - and How Writers Get Them Wrong

They're heavier to hold than to read about. They cause more accidental damage than you'd think. They go dull if you so much as look at them. What else haven't we been told about Excalibur and its edgy ilk

Hank Reinhardt

Friday 3:00 p H309

Rhythm, Meter, and the Use of Language

Unresolved anapests? Short. Choppy. Sentence. Fragments? Changing viewpoints mid-paragraph? What are some of the ways to vary the "beat" of prose, and how (why?) are these methods used? How can they be used well? Badly? How can particular writing styles attract or repel readers

Greer Gilman (m), Lee Martindale, David Marusek, Martha Soukup, Jo Walton

Friday 3:00 p H310

The Real Middle Ages (2 hours)

Michael F. Flynn

Friday 3:00 p H311

I Can Explain That! - the SF/Fantasy Challenge

Test the wits of our panel, as they offer the silliest scientific (?) explanations for SF and fantasy cliches, suggested by the audience. Deconstruct the standard tropes (e.g., faster than light travel, trolls, genetic engineering, enchanted objects as so forth) ..... could that magic sword be created by straight physics, or might there be a reason for a clan of elves to build a starship

Catherine Asaro, Chris French, Jordin T. Kare (m), Robert A. Metzger, Isaac Szpindel, Lawrence Watt-Evans

Friday 3:00 p H312

The Use and Misuse of Violence in SF and Fantasy

Lawrence Block once noted that sex and violence in fiction are the best ways to get people's attention. But on the flip side, there's a point at which such things become gratuitous. When is violence absolutely necessary in a story? When does it become gratuitous, or simply in the story for its own sake?And how much is too much

Joe Haldeman, Bey King, Mindy Klasky, Katya Reimann (m)

Friday 3:00 p Art Show

Art Show Tour

Larry Niven

Friday 3:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Debra Doyle, David Gerrold, Simon R. Green, Louise Marley, Elizabeth Moon, Mary H. Rosenblum, Delia Sherman

Friday 3:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

James Macdonald, Robert J. Sawyer, Sheila Williams

Friday 3:00 p Beacon A

Kinderfilk with Kate Gladstone [ages 2-6]

Songs for the young to tickle their silly bone.

Friday 3:00 p Beacon A

Kinderfilk with Kate Gladstone

Friday 3:00 p Beacon A

Kinderfilk (Kate Gladstone)

Friday 3:00 p Beacon A

Kinderfilk (1-6)

Mary C. Miller

Friday 3:00 p Beacon D

Musical Instruments - from the Things You Find at Home (7-12)

Let's make an orchestra! Coffee cans, oatmeal boxes, toilet paper tubes, combsā take some paper and markers to decorate, then We'll play.

Friday 3:00 p Beacon F

Magnetic Bookmark [ages 5-8]

Stopping in the middle of a page can be so confusing when you get back to reading. Create a fun paper bookmark that will mark the line to start reading again.

Friday 3:00 p Clarendon

More About Tavern Songs

(More of a teaching/discussion/sing-a-long? to a filk audience...)

Sean McMullen, Faye Ringel

Friday 3:00 p Dalton

Creating Alien Languages (3 hours)

Stanley Schmidt, Lawrence Schoen

Friday 3:00 p Exeter

Reading

Paul DiFilippo

Friday 3:00 p Gardner

Discussing the LOTR Fellowship (7-12)

Participate in a lively discussion about the LOTR books. Dave will be introducing the characters as they are in the book, perhaps discussing the difference between having a position by Merit versus by Blood, and what would it be like to live in Middle-Earth. Come bring your own ideas.

David Weingart

Friday 3:00 p Hall A

Music

Friday 3:00 p Hampton

Reading

Ellen Kushner

Friday 3:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Ellen Datlow, James Patrick Kelly, Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jean Lorrah, Frederik Pohl

Friday 3:00 p Liberty A

Heinlein Society (David Silver)

Friday 3:00 p Liberty C

Viable Paradise (Mary Henghan and James D. Macdonald)

Friday 3:00 p Republic A

Royal Space Force: The Wings of Honneamise [Subtitled] [N/R]

Friday 3:00 p Republic B

Smallville: Rosetta

Short Form Dramatic Presentation Hugo Nominee

Friday 3:30 p H210

Concert

Mary C. Miller

Friday 3:30 p H305

Story Crafting From Your Subconscious

Do your characters surprise you? Is your outline giving you fits? Do strange things keep happening in your narrative? Find out why that's a good thing, in this light-hearted program.

Tamara Jones

Friday 3:30 p H307

On Books on Demand

Roger MacBride Allen

Friday 3:30 p Exeter

Reading

David Levine

Friday 3:30 p Hampton

Reading

Jeff VanderMeer

Friday 4:00 p H100

Pair-Of-Dice Games Players Choice

Learn to play any of Pair-Of-Dice's exciting, award-winning games.

Friday 4:00 p H107

What's New From Pyr/Prometheus (Lou Anders)

Gardner Dozois, Mike Resnick

Friday 4:00 p H203

Educating for Science Literacy

Harry Potter showed us that the kids can read. Now, what do we do to get them scientifically literate

Bridget Coila, Leslie Howle, Isaac Szpindel (m), Pat York

Friday 4:00 p H204

Crossing Over

Is cross-genre writing becoming more popular? (Why or why not?) What are the special challenges of it? The rewards

Lisa Barnett, Joshua Bilmes, Laura Anne Gilman (m), Charlaine Harris, Sue Krinard, Madeleine E. Robins

Friday 4:00 p H205

Beyond the Con: Connecting to Worldwide Fandom

Science-fiction conventions have proliferated so that there's at least one on every weekend of the year and five or six on many. Is there any reason to engage in fan activity beyond con going? What else is there to do? Why should you seek a connection to world-wide fandom and how can you do it? (A great place to learn more about TAFF and DUFF from this year's winners, too!)

James Bacon, Norman Cates, Anna Feruglio Dal Dan, John-Henri Holmberg, Jim Young (m)

Friday 4:00 p H206

Shared World Fiction

I created this world -- How dare you blow it up!

John Betancourt, Peter J. Heck, George R. R. Martin, Wil McDermott, Rebecca Moesta, Deborah Ross (m)

Friday 4:00 p H208

Sex, Lies and Superheroes: Introduced by Constantine

Friday 4:00 p H209

Gundam Movie II [Subtitled]

Friday 4:00 p H210

Science and Song

Songs based on science, presented and discussed by workers in the field. What are they really about, and how silly or possible are they

Jordin T. Kare (m), H. Paul Shuch, Kathleen Sloan

Friday 4:00 p H301

The Prometheus Awards

Friday 4:00 p H302

The Transcendental Man

Transcendental or transhuman? Explore this theme in SF and fantasy -- and reality???

Jeffrey A. Carver, Robert I. Katz (m), James Macdonald, Nick Sagan

Friday 4:00 p H303

Do Women Write Differently

Well, do they

Suzy McKee Charnas, Theodora Goss, Eileen Gunn, Elizabeth Anne Hull (m), Justine Larbalestier

Friday 4:00 p H304

When is a Cyborg

We think of the first cyborg as a severely injured test pilot rebuilt "better, faster, stronger." But wouldn't it have been a Neolithic hunter who strapped on a wooden leg? Or maybe a mouse with an insulin pump? What about Galileo, peering through a telescope that tremendously extended the range of his naked-eye vision? And if I had had a telescope implanted in my left eye last summer, would that have made me a cyborg? Does it have to do with what is new technology at the time? Does and it probe our native Luddist fear of the new and poorly-understood. How does it reflect on the degree of integration of the new technology with the person? A crutch is less integrated than a wooden leg, just as a hand-held camera is less integrated than an implanted one. If an infrared camera provided a "third eye" in a different part of the spectrum, would it make a person into a cyborg more than night-vision binoculars? Does it matter if we're providing new capabilities or replacing/improving upon old ones? And what about improving on defective vision? What is a human

Janice M. Eisen (m), John M. Ford, Nancy Kress, W. A. Thomasson, Connie Willis

Friday 4:00 p H305

Rumors at the Speed of Light

The downside of rapid internet communication.

Charles Ardai, Sharon Sbarsky, John Scalzi (m)

Friday 4:00 p H306

The Civil War and Sf

The U.S. Civil War is a popular theme, revisited by writers time and time again. How has it been represented, both in and out of the subgenre of alternate history? And can we think of something more creative to do than ask the perennial question "What if the South had won?"

Duncan W. Allen, Teresa Nielsen Hayden, Harry Turtledove, Toni Weisskopf (m), Peter Weston

Friday 4:00 p H307

Color Mechanics and Theory

How can you choose and work with color to create art and evoke emotion? Does the use you put the painting to make a difference

Ed Cox, Jael, Margaret Organ-Kean (m), Martina Pilcerova, Omar Rayyan

Friday 4:00 p H309

Art in Space: A History of Space Art

David A. Hardy

Friday 4:00 p H311

The Future of the News Media

Things have changed in many ways over the last year. How is the current political situation affecting the news media, and where will this take us in the future...

Sally Wiener Grotta, Daniel Hatch (m), Allen Steele, Rick Wilber

Friday 4:00 p H312

Everything You Know Is Wrong: SF That Questions Reality

Over the years, a number of SF works have played with reality. Phil Dick wrote many novels asking what is real. The trend has accelerated recently, to the point where even wildly popular movies like The Truman Show, Pleasantville, and The Matrix are looking at similar issues. The panel discusses SF that plays with reality. What are the seminal works in this subgenre? Is it really getting more popular now? If so, why

Jack Dann, John R. Douglas, Evelyn C. Leeper (m), Barry N. Malzberg, Eric M. Van, Robert Charles Wilson

Friday 4:00 p Art Show

Tour of the Retro Art Exhibit

Jerry Weist

Friday 4:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Keith R. A. DeCandido, Stephen Dedman, Craig Gardner, Elizabeth Hand, David A. Kyle, Amy Thomson, Janine Ellen Young

Friday 4:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Patricia Bray, William Tenn, Steven Sawicki

Friday 4:00 p Mended Drum

Knitting (etc.) Circle

Friday 4:00 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Friday 4:00 p Beacon D

How to Look at the Night Sky (7-12)

Astronomy tips from one of the writers for Sky & Telescope

Carolyn Collins Petersen

Friday 4:00 p Beacon F

Draw a Story [ages 4-12]

Tell a story, simple or complex, using only pictures that you have created.

Friday 4:00 p Clarendon

Guitar Workshop

Bill Sutton

Friday 4:00 p Exeter

Reading

G. David Nordley

Friday 4:00 p Gardner

Polymer Dragons [ages 7-12] (Robin Trei)

Learn how to make your own dragon from polymer clay in this hands-on session. We will bake your critter after the session, and you can pick it up on Saturday. Limit 25.

Friday 4:00 p Hampton

Reading

Alex Irvine

Friday 4:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Jim Butcher, Beth Hilgartner, Josepha Sherman, S. M. Stirling

Friday 4:00 p Liberty A

Thunderbirds

Friday 4:30 p Exeter

Reading

Thomas A. Easton

Friday 4:30 p Hampton

Reading

Karl Schroeder

Friday 5:00 p H100

Giant Ice Towers

Icetowers is a high-speed game of pyramid stacking, played without turns on any flat surface. Everyone plays at once, by 'capping' other pieces with those of their own color. If yours is the top piece on a tower at the end of the game, you get points for the whole tower. As towers grow smaller, you'll be able to 'mine' pieces out and replay them, or even 'split' some towers in two. The game ends when no more moves are possible.

Friday 5:00 p H203

Turning Science into SF

Michael A. Burstein, Thomas A. Easton

Friday 5:00 p H204

The Salvation of the Modern Novel

At the 1965 "Loncon," Harry Harrison gave this speech....it set forth the notion that science fiction was now the only route open for writing abut the modern world, as science was the main feature of the modern world that distinguished it from previous eras....True then? Now? Has anything changed? (And if so, what?)

Jim Grimsley (m), Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Harry Harrison, Andrew Wheeler, Paul Witcover

Friday 5:00 p H205

The Miyazaki Fen Don't See

Is Hayao Miyazaki a more important filmaker of the fantastic than Stephen Spielberg or Peter Jackson? The evidence mounts. With release of his Howl's Moving Castle upcoming, we'll discuss the man, his movies, and the mystery of why too many of us still haven't seen his stuff.

Bob Devney (m), Timothy Liebe, Neil Nadelman, Tom Schaad, Wen Spencer

Friday 5:00 p H206

Life Drawing

Bring your sketchbooks and draw from a model during this two-hour session.

Elizabeth Janes

Friday 5:00 p H210

Concert

Juanita Coulson

Friday 5:00 p H301

Fantasy and SF on Stage

Fandom tends to ignore the theatrical world, but playwrights are increasingly turning to the theatrical world. There have even been some well received science fiction musicals that have worked, though most have been less than successful. (why?). Why is literary SF virtually untouched as a source of plays and musicals? Discuss, criticize, review and recommend the "SF/F/H" live theatre events you've seen in recent years

Laura Frankos, Keith G. Kato (m), Dennis Livingston

Friday 5:00 p H302

The Alien As...

....benefactor, conqueror, lust object? Discuss the ways aliens have been regarded in the past and present, and why some stories are more convincing than others in their depictions.

Jeffrey A. Carver (m), Rosemary Kirstein, Sue Krinard, Katherine Kurtz, Steven Popkes, Robert Reed

Friday 5:00 p H303

When Fandom Hurts

Fandom is a truly wonderful thing - but is this always the case? How can fandom hurt? Can it be physically damaging? Financially? Psychologically? Socially? What can one learn from being hurt (or being the hurter) to avoid the same results in the future

Elaine Brennan, Mike Glyer, Geri Sullivan (m)

Friday 5:00 p H304

Where Did That Story Come From

History hidden in well-known SF, for the historical illiterati.

David B. Coe, Alex Irvine, Mark L. Olson, Harry Turtledove (m), Sarah Zettel

Friday 5:00 p H305

Bookcovers

Bookcovers are a very special species of illustration. Are they all about bimbos in bikinis? How does a cover sell a book? Is it about color, subject matter, style? If the book market fails completely (when it's all digital, that is!), what will artists have to illustrate next

Alan F. Beck, Irene Gallo (m), Don Maitz, David B. Mattingly, Michael Whelan

Friday 5:00 p H306

Writing for Comics

Somewhere between novels and screenplays can be found the comic book. How does one write for the comics? What's the difference between script-first and plot-first? Can you write for comics if you have no artistic talent whatsoever? How do you break into the field in the first place

Daniel Abraham, Kevin J. Anderson, Keith R. A. DeCandido, Scott Edelman (m)

Friday 5:00 p H307

Making Necklaces with Stories in Them

Elise Matthesen

Friday 5:00 p H309

The Art of Tom Kidd

Slide show

Thomas Kidd

Friday 5:00 p H310

Drunk on Technology

We're living in a science fiction world, and its technological magic is getting wilder (and more wonderful?!) by the minute. Are these marvels going to our heads? (In a "good" way?) How do we deal with the intoxication of "present shock"

Cory Doctorow (m), Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Charles Stross

Friday 5:00 p H311

The Emotional Palette of Horror

What are some sources of fear in horror? Why aren't some things scary anymore? After all, the classic horror film ideas are no longer frightening to today's audiences). Is it still entertaining to be scared

Simon R. Green, Steven Sawicki, Darrell Schweitzer, Rick Wilber (m), Trish Wilson

Friday 5:00 p H312

How not to Write Science Fiction

From the 1966 "Tricon" ...a very bad "Worldbuilding 101" - predatory herbivores, economics that don't work, violations of the laws of physics. Give examples (heck, make some up!) and discuss.

Roger MacBride Allen, Jack L. Chalker, Daniel P. Dern (m), Chris French, Liz Gorinsky

Friday 5:00 p Art Show

April Grant, fiddler

April Grant

Friday 5:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Robert Buettner, Glen Cook, Melanie Fletcher, Neil Gaiman, Lawrence Watt-Evans, Walter Jon Williams, Janny Wurts

Friday 5:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

David Gerrold, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Delia Sherman

Friday 5:00 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Friday 5:00 p Beacon D

Storyboarding (7-12)

Ever wondered how to write and illustrate your own story? Learn how -- now!

Ruth Sanderson

Friday 5:00 p Beacon F

Model Magic Sculpture [ages 3-12]

Model magic is an air-drying clay that can be colored using magic markers. We'll have a different theme for each day's creation.

Friday 5:00 p Clarendon

Technology and Music Recording

Decent multitrack recording is now available, relatively cheaply, to anyone with a PC of a Mac. How will this affect filk? Additionally, there are now so many new methods of song distribution - will traditional filk recording die away

David R. Howell (m), J. Spencer Love, Bill Roper

Friday 5:00 p Exeter

Reading

Chris Moriarty

Friday 5:00 p Gardner

Best Filk Songs for Kids (7-12)

Hear them from some of the best filkers at Worldcon; learn the choruses, and sing along!

Mark Mandel, Bill Sutton, David Weingart

Friday 5:00 p Hall A

Music

April Grant

Friday 5:00 p Hampton

Reading

Tamora Pierce

Friday 5:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

F. Brett Cox, Laura Resnick, Ian Randal Strock, Cecilia Tan

Friday 5:00 p Liberty C

Sports Discussion Group (James Wolf)

Friday 5:15 p Republic A

Yukikaze #1 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Friday 5:30 p H210

Concert

Blind Lemming Chiffon

Friday 5:30 p H210

Pegasus Nominees Concert

Friday 5:30 p Mended Drum

Live Action Roleplaying Gaming: Death by Deatheast: Apocalypse Tonight

The portents are clearāas mud. Anybody with a modicum of astrological skill can tell you what it means when Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto are in alignment. That same person can tell you the meaning of a full lunar eclipse, and of the spring equinox. These are all very well known phenomena. That all of these portents are happening tonight, all at once, is unlikely to the point of breaking rationality, and nearly unfathomable. What IS truly strange, an odd to the extreme, are the sightings of extra suns. Some say there was a blue second sun at zenith at dawn, and it remained in the sky until noon. Others disagree, saying a red sun rose at noon, and still point to it. Such sightings could mean the end of the world as we know it, but perhaps it is just a universal bad hair day. Enjoy yourself silly as your pre-generated character confronts the likely end of the world. [12 - 20 players]

Friday 5:30 p Exeter

Reading

Greer Gilman

Friday 5:30 p Grand Ballroom

Swing Dance Practice Lesson

Warm up for tonight's Sock Hop. Larry Schroeder will instruct the basics of Jitterbug. Dance shoes recommended.

Friday 5:30 p Hampton

Reading

Charlaine Harris

Friday 6:00 p

Masquerade Registration Closes

Friday 6:00 p H203

The Archaeology of the Future: Reading Science Fictional Futures/Learning About the Past (Eric Sons)

Friday 6:00 p H204

Dialogue

Michael Swanwick, Jo Walton

Friday 6:00 p H205

Lights for Gadgets and Costumes

A discussio/workshop about safety, power demands for different effects, the use of batteries, and a variety of related issues of interest to the costumer who want to make a more *electrifying* presentation....

Ming Diaz

Friday 6:00 p H206

Constructing Technobabble

How do people come up with all these new words (and brand names, drug names, etc.) that permeate the linguistic landscape? Are there tricks to this kind of word coinage, certain language always used (or, overused), certain sound combinations that convey special meanings? How does globalization affect this process: incorporating word roots from more exotic cultures? Why do some coinages fail to catch on

Mark Mandel (m), John McDaid, Scott Westerfeld

Friday 6:00 p H208

Boston Fan Films

Friday 6:00 p H307

Workshop: Dramatic Posing and Costume Presentation

Pierre E. Pettinger

Friday 6:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

M. M. Buckner, Keith R. A. DeCandido, Herb Kauderer

Friday 6:00 p Clarendon

And the Band Played During Our Filksing

...and what other horrible things have gone wrong with filk at conventions

Gary Ehrlich, Lynn Gold, W. Randy Hoffman, J. Spencer Love, Bill Roper, Bill Sutton (m)

Friday 6:00 p ConCourse

Site Selection Closes for Day

Friday 6:00 p Exeter

Reading

Shane Tourtellotte

Friday 6:00 p Hall D

Dealers Closes

Friday 6:00 p Hampton

Reading

Deborah Ross

Friday 6:00 p Independence

Call of Cthulhu RPG: Treatment and Cure

There's a gap in your past. At some point, you went madābut cannot remember why. Now you're here at the Enfield Clinic, with other patient who, like yourself, have recently come to their senses after struggles with crippling insanity. Tonight we're just having a support meeting, to talk over what it feels like to face life with these breaks in our memory. Don't mind the snowstorm; by tomorrow noon the roads will be plowed, and the lights should be fine once the backup generator kicks in. If you'll just get a cup of coffee, we'll get started in a minute. I'll go find Ted, he should have been here by now. Ted? Has anyone seen him? Note: At the beginning of this game, each player will choose the nature of another character's madness. Players will not know their own character's madnessāuntil something reminds them. [5 players, pre-generated characters will be made available]

Friday 6:30 p H100

Mechwarrior Tournament

Bring your army and test it in this Wizkids sanctioned tournament. [450 pts]

Friday 6:30 p H203

The Interpenetration of Past and Present in Octavia Butler's "Kindred" (Veronica Browning)

Friday 6:30 p H206

Technobabble Quiz

We're going to reverse the polarity of the neutron flow of our panelists as they compete to (a) explain in their best technobabble just how to do some SF cliche, (b) catch science errors in published SF technobabble, and (c) determine whether a particular selection of technobabble is real science, published SF, or something made up just for the quiz!

Howard Davidson, Bill Higgins (m), Jordin T. Kare

Friday 6:30 p H209

Hakkenden [Subtitled]

Friday 6:30 p Art Show

Art Show Tour (Donato Giancola)

Friday 6:30 p Exeter

Reading

Ben Jeapes

Friday 6:30 p Hampton

Reading

Lisa Barnett, Melissa Scott

Friday 6:30 p Republic A

Dai-Guard #1 [Dubbed]

Friday 7:00 p H100

Illuminati: Crime Lords

The Mafia is alive and well in this card game based on the Illuminati card system from SJ Games. You have fought hard and well to rise in the ranks of the Mafia. You now control a family viewing for control of the town. Choose your Boss and Lieutenants, hire thugs, brains, and then set out to take over the town. Choose your source of income from places like: crooked precincts, street gangs, pushers, and other illicit businesses. Play your cards wisely, however, or you may end up in the middle of an all out gang war, which could decimate your forces faster than any assassination attempt. This game is featured in the SJ Games tournament. [6 players]

Friday 7:00 p H205

Fannish Foxfire

OK. the apocalypse has happened. What do we need to know to carry on being a fan afterwards? Would such a fandom be similar to eo-fandom? Would you need to know the Hectograph, slip sheeting, the fine lost art of letter writing....or would the only fans left be on the net

Guy H. Lillian, Joe Siclari (m), Joel Zakem

Friday 7:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Friday 7:00 p Con Suite Foyer

Music

Friday 7:00 p Exeter

Reading

Christopher Cevasco

Friday 7:00 p Hall A

Music

Friday 7:00 p Hampton

Reading

Don D'Ammassa

Friday 7:00 p Liberty C

Small Press Roundtable

Friday 7:00 p Republic A

Dai-Guard #2 [Dubbed]

Friday 7:30 p Art Show

Denise Gendron, flutist

Denise Gendron

Friday 7:30 p Exeter

Reading

Darrell Schweitzer

Friday 7:30 p Hampton

Reading

Michael Dobson

Friday 7:30 p Republic A

Blue Seed 6 - 12 [Subtitled]

Friday 8:00 p H204

Jewish Services

Friday 8:00 p H208

Ryan K. Johnson Fan Films

Friday 8:00 p H210

The Chesley Awards

The Chesleys are the annual peer awards whereby the Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists (ASFA) recognized individual works and achievements.

Friday 8:00 p Auditorium

The Time Machine -- Guest Interviews and The 1953 Retro Awards

Take a short trip with our Guest, experiening world past, present, and future through their eyes...Then help celbrate the best in science fiction and fantasy from 1953 with some special commentators as we present the 1953 Retro Hugo Awards.

Bob Eggleton, William Tenn, Terry Pratchett, Jack Speer, Peter Weston

Friday 8:00 p Clarendon

Open Filk

Friday 8:00 p ConCourse

Blindfolded Sculpting, with audience participation.

Come with suggestions for bizarre creatures to be sculpted or join in! With Sandra Lira, Heidi Hooper, Susan Finley, Mike Ventrella, and two guest sculptors.

Friday 8:00 p Dalton

Open Filk - No taping

Friday 8:00 p Exeter

Reading

Melanie Fletcher

Friday 8:00 p Hall A

Registration Closes

Friday 8:00 p Hampton

Broad Universe Reading

Friday 8:00 p Independence

Deryni Adventure

Join Ann Dupuis, publisher of the upcoming Deryni Adventure Game, for a roleplaying adventure involving Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of travelling performers.

Friday 8:30 p Exeter

Reading

Elizabeth Caldwell

Friday 8:30 p Hampton

Reading

John Betancourt

Friday 9:00 p H100

Blood and Cardstock Games Players Choice

Open demo session. Learn exciting games like Showbiz and Counting ZZZs.

Friday 9:00 p H205

The Well Read Fan

What literature, fiction and non-fiction, should every fan have read. Fans are slans, so you'd better know what slans are! And Doc Smith might not be the smoothest read, but he personifies sensawunda!

Fred Lerner, Edie Stern (m), Ben Yalow

Friday 9:00 p Conference

Filk Office Re-opens

Friday 9:00 p Con Suite Foyer

Ellen James, harpist

Friday 9:00 p Exeter

Open Filk

Friday 9:00 p Gardner

Rendezvous

Friday 9:00 p Hampton

Open Filk

Friday 10:00 p H204

Slash Fiction

How about Snape and the Nazgul???? The history and/or modern trends of slash fan fiction, with a special look at its role in anime/manga fandom ("Shonen ai" and "yaoi" material.) A discussion of the socially redeeming aspects of all this...

Christine Carpenito, Kimberly Ann Kindya, Victoria McManus

Friday 10:00 p H206

Trivia for Chocolate

Answer the questions right and get a piece of chocolate (but don't eat it before it's counted up!)

Mark L. Olson, Priscilla Olson, Joe Siclari, Steven H. Silver

Friday 10:00 p Art Show

Art Show Closes

Friday 10:00 p Art Show

Art Show Reception (by invitation only)

Friday 10:00 p Art Show

Art Show Reception

Featuring The Sonic Explorers

Friday 10:00 p Mended Drum

Concert

Grant Carrington

Friday 10:00 p Mended Drum

Concert by Grant Carrington

Friday 10:00 p Grand Ballroom

Noreascon 4 Sockhop and Swing Dance w/ the Indian Hill Big Band

Come swing to the music of the Indian Hill Big Band. The lively beat and great tunes will compliment the 50's-era Retro Hugos. Poodle Skirts, welcome!

Friday 10:00 p Republic A

Filler (BS-Omake Theaters)

Friday 10:30 p Republic A

3 x 3 Eyes: Immortals [Subtitled] [16 +]

Friday 11:00 p H100

Chez Geek

An Origins award winner from SJ Games. You thought college life was going to be great. No parents, no siblings, nobody looking over your shoulder every 5 minutes. How were you to know the horrors of living in a college dorm; Pesky neighbors that harass you to no end, the backbreaking job you thought was a piece of cake, the tuition bills that keep piling up, and even the idiot with a chainsaw that keeps you awake all night. This game is featured in the SJ Games tournament. Note: this game is intended for older teens and adults.

Friday 11:00 p Mended Drum

Concert

Bill Roper

Friday 11:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Friday 11:00 p Exeter

Rendezvous

Friday 11:00 p Gardner

Open Filk

Friday 11:00 p Gardner

Open Filk

Friday 11:30 p Mended Drum

Concert (Irish Music) (Bed&Breakfast)

Friday 12:00 m

Childcare Closes

Friday 12:00 m Grand Ballroom

Shaun of the Dead

Saturday

Saturday 0:00 a Mended Drum

Singalong with Filthy Pierre

Saturday 0:15 a Mended Drum

Concert (The Fibs)

Tom Fenton, Jim Iarocci, Carl William Thiel

Saturday 0:30 a Republic A

Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust [Dubbed] [R]

Saturday 1:00 a Mended Drum

Beatles Singalong

Old Favorites. Bring your voice, even your guitar. We provide a piano and a few Beatles songbooks.

Saturday 1:00 a Mended Drum

Last Call at the Mended Drum

Saturday 1:00 a Exeter

Open Filk

Saturday 2:00 a

Hynes Closes

Saturday 2:00 a

Pedestrian Overpass to Marriott Closed

Saturday 2:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Closes

Saturday 2:15 a Republic A

Reign: The Conqueror #5 - 7 [Dubbed] [16 +]

Saturday 3:00 a Clarendon

Filk Office Closes

Saturday 8:00 a

Hynes Open for Setup Only

Saturday 9:00 a

Hynes Opens

Saturday 9:00 a H102

Drum Circle

Saturday 9:00 a Grand Ballroom

Discworld: Soul Music

Saturday 9:00 a Hall A

Registration Opens

Saturday 9:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Open

Saturday 9:00 a Liberty A

Jewish Services

Saturday 9:00 a Republic A

Risky/Safety [Dubbed]

Saturday 9:30 a

Childcare Opens

Saturday 9:30 a H203

Christian Apocalyptic Fiction and SF (Tom Doyle)

Saturday 9:30 a Beacon A

Moving to Music [ages 1-7]

Clap and sing to the music of Jim Cosgrove, a Kansas City children's folk singer.

Saturday 9:30 a Beacon F

Edible Necklace [ages 1-5]

Need a snack between activities? Make one using low-sugar snacks and plastic lacing.

Saturday 9:30 a Conference

Filk Office Opens

Saturday 9:30 a Exeter

Reading

Marc Giller

Saturday 10:00 a

Masquerade Registration Open

Saturday 10:00 a H100

Mechwarrior

Learn how to play the hit mechanized battle simulation from Wizkids.

Saturday 10:00 a H102

Rounds Singing

What is a round, you ask? Come learn how to sing rounds and canons. Some are filk, some are not.

Lois H. Mangan

Saturday 10:00 a H107

What's New from Ace/Roc

Ginjer Buchanan

Saturday 10:00 a H204

SFWA Meeting

Saturday 10:00 a H205

How Does Language Influence Thought

The Whorf hypotheis (no, not the Klingon) states that language completely determines thought, i.e., if your language doesn't have a word for the concept, then you can't even conceive of the concept. Many linguists consider this nonsense, but all agree there is some truth to it. How does the language we use shape the thoughts we have? Why is it impossible to completely understand the concepts of another language without learning it? What gets lost in translation

Geary Gravel, John-Henri Holmberg, Elizabeth Anne Hull (m), Kathy Morrow

Saturday 10:00 a H208

Firefly Marathon, Episode 6-8

Saturday 10:00 a H209

Galaxy Express 999 [Dubbed]

Saturday 10:00 a H210

WSFS Business Meeting, First Main Session

The WSFS Business Meeting is open to all Worldcon members. Today's meeting will debate and vote on amendments to the WSFS Constitution. The elections for the WSFS Mark Protection Committee are scheduled for this meeting as well.

Saturday 10:00 a H301

The Space Elevator

The space elevator is moving from the pages of science fiction to science fact. This presentation willcover the state of the art of space elevator technology, discussing the components of a space elevator and how it can be built. There will be lots of time for Q&A!

Tom Nugent Jr.

Saturday 10:00 a H302

Doorstops: Truly Enormous Book and Series

Huge books .... a neverending series. - why are these herniators so popular? Why does it take so many words to tell a good story? Does anyone edit anymore

Daniel Abraham, Kevin J. Anderson, William C. Dietz, Beth Meacham (m), Martha Wells

Saturday 10:00 a H303

Imaginative Fiction: A 3rd World Perspective

Why are science fiction and fantasy important to the Third World? And in what way could the Third World be important to science fiction and fantasy? Fans, readers and writers around the world are embracing imaginative fiction, and adapting and transforming it to reflect upon their societies and their possible futures. Much Anglo-American SF glorifies humans colonizing other worlds, but writers from post-colonial cultures are more likely to identify with the conquered aliens. As imaginative fiction crosses national and cultural border, how can we -- Anglo-Americans and others -- sample, learn from, and enjoy the resulting rich brew? A personal take on the subject from a writer born and raised in India, with discussion to follow.

Vandana Singh

Saturday 10:00 a H304

Reading (1-hour)

Neil Gaiman

Saturday 10:00 a H305

The Perils of Pitching

Marc Giller

Saturday 10:00 a H306

Great Moments from SF Films

Since "movies are moments," let's recall a few dozen of the really great ones.

Bob Devney (m), MaryAnn Johanson, Daniel Kimmel, Mark R. Leeper, Kathi D. Overton

Saturday 10:00 a H309

Where Art Meets Science: The Genomic Sculptures of Mara Haseltime

New York artist Mara Haseltine has devoted her career to probing the arena where art and genetics intersect. She focuses in particular on large scale sculptures that reflect current scientific knowledge of cell structures and processes. For example "The Waltz of the Polypeptides" is a sculptural landscape based on electonic microscope and MNR imaging of ribosomes and proteins, computer processed and fabricated into three dimensions unsing milling and rapid prototyping technologies. Mara will discuss this, the Inflatable and Molecular Subworlds Project, and other workds in a slide talk.

Mara Haseltine, Dennis Livingston (m)

Saturday 10:00 a H310

Groundpounding 101

Just how fast could a nuclear steam locomotive pull a transatlantic train? Would hexapedal draft animals really be more efficient than quadrupeds? A short course in the physics of ground transportation, with some fascinating examples of technologies ranging from historic fact to prototypes that led nowhere to the world's first commercially operated high-speed magnetic levitation system.

Duncan W. Allen

Saturday 10:00 a H312

What SF Writers Are/Aren't Doing Today

Based on two talks at the 1968 Worldcon (Baycon): "What SF Writers Are Doing Today and Why" (Brunner) and "What SF Writers Aren't Doing Today That They Should" (Garrett). Expound!

John R. Douglas, Jim Grimsley, David McMahon, Graham Sleight (m)

Saturday 10:00 a Art Show

Art Show Opens

Saturday 10:00 a Art Show

Denise Gendron, flutist

Denise Gendron

Saturday 10:00 a Auditorium

Presenting Your Costume: What Tech Can Do For You

Tips for making a presentation that will show off your costume to its best advantage -- and then how to use tech to help enhance their work....for example, if you're a swan you might want a blue background or lighting. Learn some new tricks to use during the Masquerade! Technical and Masquerade staff will be on hand to give you advice.

Richard Hill, Kevin P. Roche

Saturday 10:00 a Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Saturday 10:00 a Beacon D

Bug-Eyed Monsters from Outer Space (7-12)

Make your own little fuzzy Bug-Eyed Monster to take home! Pick your colors, add your eyes, and give it a name with Noreascon's own Fuzzy BEM specialist.

Susan de Guardiola

Saturday 10:00 a Beacon F

Model Magic Sculpture [ages 3-12]

Model magic is an air-drying clay that can be colored using magic markers. We'll have a different theme for each day's creation.

Saturday 10:00 a ConCourse

Site Selection Opens

Saturday 10:00 a Exeter

Reading

Tobias Buckell

Saturday 10:00 a Gardner

Discworld: a Kid's View (7-12)

Examine childhood life in Ankh-Mohrpork or another fantasy world...how would it differ from what you know now? What do you think would be the same? Adults must have a child with them to be admitted to this program item.

Terry Pratchett

Saturday 10:00 a Hall A

Medieval Dagger

Fighting in the Middle Ages could be brutal, and never more so than when combatants faced each other armed only with daggers. See the skills needed to survive a medieval knife fight, as taught in contemporary combat manuals and presented by the Higgins Armory Sword Guild.

Saturday 10:00 a Hall D

Dealers Opens

Saturday 10:00 a Hampton

Reading

Isaac Szpindel

Saturday 10:00 a Independence

Toon RPG: Codename Kids Part 1

The Kids Next Door Headquarters has lost contact with the orbital station and potty stop. Your team's job is to determine the cause and correct the problem. [6 players]

Saturday 10:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Alex Irvine, Thomas Kidd, Karen Traviss

Saturday 10:30 a

(Meeting Fans in Marriott?)

Tamora Pierce

Saturday 10:30 a H203

From the Fringes of the 6 o'clock News: SF, Public Discourse, and the Mainstream (Heather Urbanski)

Saturday 10:30 a H206

The Ethics of Cloning

Join our Fan Guest, and learn his take on this hot (and somewhat frightening) advance in modern biomedical science.

Jack Speer

Saturday 10:30 a H303

Fixing SF

Does it need to be fixed? If so, why? (And how would you do it?)

Matthew Jarpe

Saturday 10:30 a H305

The Speculative Literature Foundation

Does science fiction need an arts foundation? What kind of grants should it give? Who should get them? What is "speculative literature" anyhow? Learn about the Foundation's awards for short fiction, grants for travel research and older writers. small press co-operative program, and forthcoming technology exchange and online classified programs. The SLF is intended to serve you, the readers, writers, editors and publishers of the spec lit community. Give you imput; what can it do for you

Mary Anne Mohanraj

Saturday 10:30 a H307

SF/F/H in Board and Card Games

Here about the past, present, and future of these games by a compulsive collector of same.

W. Randy Hoffman

Saturday 10:30 a Clarendon

Beyond the Human Genome Project

....lies what? And where will this (slightly scary?) science be taking us

Ronald Taylor

Saturday 10:30 a Dalton

A Visit to Outer Mongolia

Amy Thomson

Saturday 10:30 a Exeter

Reading

Louise Marley

Saturday 10:30 a Hall A

Renaissance Rapier and Dagger

Watch the most romantic of swords in action! The rapier is the best-known of swords, making it appearance in everything from Shakespeare to swashbuckler movies. In this presentation, the HASG revives the lost art of its use as described in one of the earliest systematic manuals of the rapier.

Saturday 10:30 a Hampton

Reading

Liz Williams

Saturday 11:00 a

Masquerade Tech Rehersal -- Section One

Saturday 11:00 a H100

SJ Games Tournament

Games include: NinjaBurger Card Game, Car Wars Card Game, Munchkin (all decks), Chez Geek, and Illuminati: Crime Wars. Players will rotate between games. You must sign up for this event. You must be in the room by 11 a.m. to play. [experience required]

Saturday 11:00 a H203

The Golden Duck Awards, and Literacy

Saturday 11:00 a H205

Bad Anime

Tales from the slush pile...

Christine Carpenito, Teddy Harvia (m), Neil Nadelman, William "Crash" Yerazunis

Saturday 11:00 a H206

Women Warriors

Which ones we admire (Buffy, Xena, Jirel Paxsenarrion) and why. Now butt-kicking women practically have a genre of their own, but it's usually "pulp-fiction" territory. Why is it still easier to imagine these heroines in non- realistic fiction - and what does that say about the shortcomings of both real world-fiction and the society we live in

Terry McGarry (m), Elizabeth Moon, Katya Reimann, Cecilia Tan

Saturday 11:00 a H301

Is Werner von Braun Haunting NASA

Werner von Braun, often considered the father of the space program, proposed building a space station more than 50 years ago. Now we finally have one, and NASA is planning to abandon it before it's properly up and running. What's going wrong? Is NASA stuck in the past, haunted by the ghosts of obsolete proposals which it can't abandon? Was the problem that Apollo didn't follow von Braun's plan, skipping the re-usable space ferries, space stations, and orbital tugs in favor of the Apollo lunge for the Moon? Was the mistake throwing away perfectly good Apollo technology that could have taken us back to the Moon and beyond years ago?

Jonathan McDowell, Jeff Hecht (m), Les Johnson, Henry Spencer, Allen Steele

Saturday 11:00 a H302

Reality Ain't What It Used To Be: Secret Histories and Urban Fantasies

Science fiction has always challenged conventional notions of reality, but recent years have seen a growing interest in speculative stories that dwell on ancient conspiracies and secret histories, parallel dimensions which interact in strange ways with our own and hidden corners of great cities in which lurk creatures of myth and legend come to life. Panelists can explore these cracks in consensual reality and their implications for the future of SF itself as a genre based largely on developments in science and technology. There are more and more books where the author, such as Tim Powers, re-examines the past and reveals the "real" secrets hidden there. Supernatural conspiracies may explain what we might have always thought of as dull historical trivia, and underlying connections between the most disparate events are elucidated with great verve. What the hell is going on here? Are secret histories gaining on alternate ones? Why are they so addictively enjoyable? How might the fantastic reinterpretation of history practiced by such authors relate to current events? And, in a world where Mae West slept with Ho Chi Minh, what even stranger connections might make intriguing reading

Paul DiFilippo, Daniel Hatch (m), Alex Irvine, Steven Sawicki

Saturday 11:00 a H303

Really Alien Languages

Klingon looks pretty strange to an English speaker, but it's still (just barely) within the boundaries of possible human languages (after all, we know that humans can learn it). What about _really_ alien languages? What are some possible features that would make a language so different from any human language that no human could ever become fluent in it? How would you transliterate it so that people can make some reasonable attempt at pronouncing it? (Um....assuming that humans are physically capable of pronouncing it, that is....)

Suzanne Alles Blom, Nomi Burstein, Mark Mandel (m), Lawrence Schoen, Timothy L. Smith

Saturday 11:00 a H304

What's Entertainment? - A Look at the Future

Entertainment probably started with oral storytelling, followed by plays and written stories. The twentieth century saw the rise of movies, radio, television, and videogames, What's next? The "feelies" (from "Brave New World"?)? Aroma symphones? Digitally created actors (oh, we already have them....)? Some perversion of virtual reality? Our panelists have come back from the future to let us know...

Simon R. Green, Henry Jenkins, James Stevens-Arce (m), Rick Wilber, Connie Willis

Saturday 11:00 a H305

Sweat and Blisters: How Much Reality Can We Stand in Fantasy Quests

Why do people on quests in fantasy literature never sweat? How do you handle all the inconveniences like potty breaks, rain, bugs, rocks under your blanket, carrying enough food and water, etc.? Does it matter

Kage Baker, Glen Cook, Sean McMullen, Peter Morwood, Josepha Sherman (m), Andrew Wheeler

Saturday 11:00 a H306

Fantasy of Manners

How do we define it? How do we draw the line, and what is its appeal? Is it a truth (universally acknowledged...) that only women can write it

Lois McMaster Bujold, Ellen Kushner, Madeleine E. Robins (m), Jo Walton

Saturday 11:00 a H307

Collecting SF art for fun and profit

The value of SF and Fantasy artwork has appreciated greatly over the years. 20 years ago, $100 was expensive -- now it's dirt cheap. Collectors give you the ins and outs of collecting and protecting.

Pamela Scoville, Jerry Weist (m), Robert K. Wiener

Saturday 11:00 a H309

The Art of Ruth Sanderson

From her home amidst the fields of western Massachusetts, Ruth illustrates classical and original fantasies for children of all ages. She's the queen of the young adult picture book. Let her beautiful oils introduce you to courtier cats, flane-feathered firebirds, pensive princesses, and a ruby-red forest half as old as time.

Ruth Sanderson

Saturday 11:00 a H310

Space Opera Noir

Space opera used to be all about optimism, excitement, and fun. Now it's about darkness, danger, and fun. How and why have modern masters such as Banks, Vinge, MacLeod, Reynolds, and Hamilton driven so far into the dark? (And why are they mostly British?)

Jim Frenkel, David G. Hartwell, James Killus (m), Toni Weisskopf, Scott Westerfeld

Saturday 11:00 a H311

Backups: Eternal Life or Eternal Death

Let's say we could record a person's mind and play it back into a new body, so that the new person couldn't be told from the old. Would that lead to immortality? Or would it lead to an endless series of deaths followed by the creation of a new person who just thinks he's the old one? Essentially, what does it mean to be oneself

M. M. Buckner, Bridget Coila, Terry Franklin, Matthew Jarpe (m), John Moore

Saturday 11:00 a H312

The Future of Food

Science fiction is full of people eating full meals as pills, or squeezing fully nutritious goop into their mouths. What will we eat? What should we eat? What's on the table? Will the foods be GM, artificial, natural, or highly organic

Zara Baxter, Barbara Chepaitis (m), Herb Kauderer, Samuel Scheiner, W. A. Thomasson, Karen Traviss

Saturday 11:00 a Art Show

An Eclectic Art Show Tour

Ctein, Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Saturday 11:00 a Autographing

Autographing

Joseph DeVito, Jael, Toni L. P. Kelner, Stanley Schmidt, Isaac Szpindel, Michael Whelan, Robert Charles Wilson

Saturday 11:00 a Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Saturday 11:00 a Beacon D

Drawing and Cartooning. (7-12)

Learn about drawing and cartooning from one of the best.

Joe Bergeron

Saturday 11:00 a Beacon F

Capes [ages 3-6]

Fabric and imagination to create your own cape with no sewing required.

Saturday 11:00 a Clarendon

Working with Fiber

Mary C. Miller

Saturday 11:00 a Dalton

About the Sci-Fi Channel

How does it make decisions to cancel or run things

Craig Engler, Shara R. Zoll

Saturday 11:00 a Exeter

Reading

Robert Buettner

Saturday 11:00 a Fan Lounge

Talking Like a Trufan: SF Slang from the Hectograph to the Web

Apas, annishes and Ackermanese. Bems, beanies and blog. Cons, corflu and crudzines. These are the ABCs of fanspeak. The gostak distims the doshes, but why don't slans read sci-fi? Don't know? You're probably a neo. Come and croggle as our panel of WKFs and BNFs explains the arcana of the sf community, argues over etymology and generally displays the art of fansmanship.

Andrew Porter, Joe Siclari, Jack Speer (m), Milton F. Stevens, Erwin S. Strauss, Joel Zakem

Saturday 11:00 a Gardner

Belly Dancing 101 (7-12)

Dr. Karen teaches an introduction to Belly dancing.

Karen Purcell

Saturday 11:00 a Grand Ballroom

Terry Pratchett GoH Speech

Our Gruest of Honor became Britain's best-selling author by writing funny fantasies. He once said, "We are trying to understand the fundamental workings of the universe by a language devised for telling another where the best fruit is." Come by and he'll probably say more things like that.

Terry Pratchett

Saturday 11:00 a Hall A

Medieval Combat

Have at you! Witness the subtle skills of attack, parry, and grapple, as the knightly arts of the falchion, halberd, dagger, and sword and buckler are brought to life from forgotten medieval manuscripts in this presentation by the HASG.

Saturday 11:00 a Hampton

Reading

Katherine Kurtz

Saturday 11:00 a Independence

Toon RPG: Codename Kids Part 2

This mission is so secret that it cannot be revealed here. Part 2 of a 2-part adventure. You do not have to play the first part to play this one. [6 players]

Saturday 11:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Elizabeth Bear, John Betancourt, Jack Dann, Liz Gorinsky

Saturday 11:00 a ConSuite

Knitting (and all that)

Saturday 11:00 a Liberty A

Odyssey Workshop Discussion

Saturday 11:00 a Liberty C

Firefly Discussion Group (Lee Ann Kaluat)

Saturday 11:00 a Republic A

Slayers Return [Dubbed]

Saturday 11:00 a Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon)

John F. Hertz

Saturday 11:30 a Con Suite Foyer

Music

Saturday 11:30 a Dalton

How Much of Our Behavior is Gene-Guided? - One Writer's Approach

Charles Oberndorf

Saturday 11:30 a Exeter

Reading

David B. Coe

Saturday 11:30 a Hall A

Swordplay through the Ages

The sword was the weapon *par excellence* for hundreds of years, and the symbol of nobility and might. During that time its techniques changed dramatically. From the subtleties of the knightly longsword to the simplicity of the military saber, watch the HASG demonstrate authentic swordplay styles, taken from surviving manuals.

Saturday 11:30 a Hampton

Reading

Nancy Kress

Saturday 12:00 n H100

HeroClix Booster Draft

Play your favorite superheroes against others in this Wizkids sanctioned event.

Saturday 12:00 n H102

Bard of the Rings: A Tolkien Filk Singalong

Erwin S. Strauss

Saturday 12:00 n H107

What's Up at Del Rey Books

Come meet the editors from Del Rey Books, and hear what's up with some of your favorite authors, including Stephen Baxter, John Birmingham, Arthur C. Clarke, Eric Flint, Peter Hamilton, Robert E. Howard, Anne McCaffrey, China Mieville, Richard Morgan, Harry Turtledove, and many others.

Steve Saffel

Saturday 12:00 n H203

The One Foot SF and Horror Film Reference Bookshelf

There are many film reference books, some general, some aimed specifically at genre films. The panel examines film reference books and tries to decide the truly essential ones are for a fan of SF and horror films. After all, you can't get ALL your info off the Internet or in the gutter.....

Bob Devney, MaryAnn Johanson (m), Daniel Kimmel, Mark R. Leeper

Saturday 12:00 n H204

Is All This Labeling Necessary

Authors, editors, artists and fans look at what labels like "science fiction," "fantasy," "genre," etc. do for us and to us. How DO you actually define this literature of the fantastic

Brian W. Aldiss, Ellen Asher, John Clute, Fred Lerner (m), James Morrow

Saturday 12:00 n H205

Is It Fair

Do magazines accept only on the basis of perceived quality of the submissions, or are there other criteria in play? If there are, what are they and how important are they? Amateurs? Because no writer can support himself by writing short stories, are short stories 'amateur' products? Are short story writers less good than novelists? Does the quality of current short stories say anything about this

Scott Edelman, Carl Frederick (m), Shawna McCarthy, Resa Nelson, Sheila Williams

Saturday 12:00 n H206

Futurists and Science Fiction Writers: Tools of the Trade

Science fiction writers often use intuitive methods of trend extrapolation and media surveys to work out the background to stories set in the future. So do "professional futurists," the cadre of individuals from many disciplines who have been advising government agencies and corporations about the shape of possible futures over the past thirty years. What are the methods futurists use? Are futurists really writing non-fiction science fiction? Do SF writers have anything to learn from futurists -- and vice versa

Brenda Jean Cooper, Christian Crews, Marc Giller, Dennis Livingston (m), Amy Oberg

Saturday 12:00 n H209

My Youth In Arcadia [Subtitled]

Saturday 12:00 n H301

What is the Rock's Motivation in This Scene

How do you keep control of your cast of characters and explain them to the reader without stopping the story

Theodora Goss, Stephen P. Kelner (m), Chris Moriarty, Martha Soukup, Jo Walton

Saturday 12:00 n H302

Why Write

Do you write for simple pleasure? For an audience? For posterity? All or none of the above? Discuss - it's all valid!

Joe Haldeman (m), James Patrick Kelly, William Tenn, Martha Wells, Gary K. Wolf

Saturday 12:00 n H303

What New Writers Need to Know

Having sold a few short stories or a first novel, a writer often enters that awkward age between being and nothingness. What are the best ways to approach a nascent career, and learn the ropes about promotion, copyrights, the IRS, etc. How do you move onward into the realm of name recognition? And how do you capitalize on that shiny-new SFWA membership, anyhow

Kevin J. Anderson, Sally Wiener Grotta, Jane Jewell (m), Vera Nazarian, James Stevens-Arce, Eleanor Wood

Saturday 12:00 n H304

Hear the Symbols Clash!

Are we literate enough to use symbolism deliberately? When is it dangerous

Jon Courtenay Grimwood, John Jarrold, Kathy Morrow (m), Vandana Singh, Takayuki Tatsumi, Mary Turzillo

Saturday 12:00 n H305

The Ethics of War Machines

The military is investing serious resources into developing military robots. Some are perfectly benign like robot logistical transport vehicles. However others like pilotless fighter aircraft go well beyond to give robots the decision making authority of when and whom to kill. Ought we not be uncomfortable about turning over such decisions to machines that lack the ethical understanding of such actions

Robert Buettner, Chris French, John G. Hemry, Steven L. Lopata, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe, Ann Tonsor Zeddies (m)

Saturday 12:00 n H306

Learning to Love Fantasy

Elves, hobbits, trolls, magic gods... For some of us, the appeal of fantasy literature is like the need for air -- it's so obvious to us why we should love it. But a huge number of people out there can't get beyond what they consider a lack of realism to appreciate it. What can we do to introduce these people to fantasy in painless ways? What arguments are there to explain our love of the genre? Bonus: How do we convince strictly hard SF readers that there's something there for them too (and yes, there is!)

Patricia Bray, Paul Levinson, Yves Meynard, Melissa Scott, Michael Swanwick, Andrew Wheeler (m)

Saturday 12:00 n H307

Children's Play in the Future

What will children be playing at in 50 years? What are the new toys: artificial pets, weightless sports, alien games? Does anyone go outside anymore and play with other kids? In fact, will the whole concept of childhood itself change? Maybe children will be "playing" at being CEOs or space warriors....for real!

Jeffrey A. Carver, Kathryn Cramer, Janice M. Eisen, Bonnie Kunzel, Isaac Szpindel (m)

Saturday 12:00 n H309

Strange Adventures: The Eccentric World of Julius Schwartz

Giant hands! Superhero abuse! Spaceman in peril! Dust monsters! And dare we mention the giant purple gorillas? When Julius Schwartz edited a comic, you knew what you would get -- taut storytelling, excellent art, a minor science lesson and a dose of weirdness treated as if it were just another everyday occurence. A light-hearted salute to the member of First Fandom who became perhaps comics' greatest editor.

Barry Short

Saturday 12:00 n H310

The End of Copyright: Can the Arts Survive the Digital Age

Can we continue to protect intellectual property? Should we? If we don't how will human creativity change

Cory Doctorow, Daniel Grotta (m), Sean M. Mead, Steve Miller, Charlie Petit, James M. Turner

Saturday 12:00 n H311

Terraforming Venus

We've already "terraformed" the Earth with global changes, and the blueprints for Mars are already on paper. What about Venus? The size is just right, and the orbit isn't bad, but what sorts of problems will we face from a sulfuric-acid greenhouse climate? How can we go about making a heaven out of hell

Terry Franklin, James Killus, Geoffrey A. Landis (m), Carolyn Collins Petersen

Saturday 12:00 n H312

The Rise of the Paranormal Romance

It's now one of the fastest-growing segments of the fiction market. Why? And why is it more than just horny vampires and angsty werewolves

Catherine Asaro, Charlaine Harris, Sue Krinard, Sandra McDonald (m), Diane Turnshek

Saturday 12:00 n Art Show

Rour of the Retro Art Exhibit

Robert K. Wiener

Saturday 12:00 n Autographing

Autographing

Lisa Barnett, Mike Brotherton, Esther Friesner, Larry Ganem, Karen Haber, Jonathan Strahan, Laura Underwood, John Zakour

Saturday 12:00 n Beacon A

Belly Dancing [ages 3-6] (Karen Purcell)

Karen Purcell will teach the fun basics of Belly dancing.

Saturday 12:00 n Beacon D

Visual Storytelling (7-12)

A hands-on introduction to creating your own comics.

Colleen Doran

Saturday 12:00 n Beacon F

Yarn Bug [ages 4-8]

Yarn, wiggle eyes and a lot of wrapping will help build up these funny creatures.

Saturday 12:00 n Clarendon

Out of Africa

Africa is stereotyped by images of low technology and despair. However the continent is filled with innovation. Poverty and a lack of societal infrastructure have resulted in some quirky little inventions--both from within and from without--like wind-up portable radios, hand-twisted pressure clothes washers, solar powered stoves, solar- powered water purifiers, and more. Additionally uncluttered emerging societies have skipped whole generations of technology coming up with a whole new way of doing things; for example you can find widespread use of cell phones and even the Internet in countries where there is little or no land-line infrastructure. What other innovations and interesting social developments have come out of Africa, which we rarely hear about? Can we dare hope that better things will come out of Africa one day

Grant Kruger, Laura Resnick, Mike Resnick, Don Sakers (m)

Saturday 12:00 n Dalton

Getting Started in Media Costuming

So, you want to be a character from "Star Wars," "Star Trek," or a comic book, or anime...? How do you get started in researching, designing, and (re-)creating your costume

Kimberly Ann Kindya, Carol Salemi, Shara R. Zoll

Saturday 12:00 n Exeter

Reading

Jim Young

Saturday 12:00 n Gardner

How To Draw Beasties (7-12)

Omar Rayyan

Saturday 12:00 n Grand Ballroom

Troll Bridge

Saturday 12:00 n Hall A

Armored Combat

See the clash of fully-armored knights as they would have fought in the Middle Ages! Hollywood's images of armored combat rely on made0up moves and special effects. Watch as the HASG presents the actual techniques, as described in medieval manuals, that knights used in battle.

Saturday 12:00 n Hampton

Reading (1 hour)

George R. R. Martin

Saturday 12:00 n ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Tobias Buckell, Wen Spencer, Jeff VanderMeer, Robert Charles Wilson

Saturday 12:00 n Liberty A

RFF/DYR/SFC (David Glenn Anderson)

Saturday 12:00 n Republic A

Iria: Zeiram [Dubbed] [13 +]

Saturday 12:30 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Saturday 12:30 p Exeter

Reading

Juanita Coulson

Saturday 1:00 p H204

The Asimov Award

Talk and presentation of this award for undergraduate writers.

Rick Wilber, Sheila Williams

Saturday 1:00 p H205

What If....Super Science Were True

...Like FTL drives, time-travel, immortality....all that really good stuff!

Susan Born, Dave Clements (m), Walter H. Hunt, Eric Landau, Tom Schaad

Saturday 1:00 p H206

The SFWA Auction

The Emergency Medical Fund of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America helps pay medical expenses for writers in our genre. You can help by bidding for and buying from a healthy assortment of donated books (signed and un-), galleys, and other interesting stuff.

Keith R. A. DeCandido, Laura Anne Gilman, Peter J. Heck, Jane Jewell

Saturday 1:00 p H208

On Making a Movie

Mike Donahue

Saturday 1:00 p H210

Filk Request Concert

Saturday 1:00 p H301

Technological Cusp Points and Alternate Histories

Many alternate histories focus on political and/or war aspects, or some form of "what if this great man/woman's life were different?" But much of the great sweep of history has been due to technological events. What are they? Consider what would have happened if they had been delayed, discovered elsewhere, or usurped by other methods. Movable type....the assembly line....the telephone...MS- DOS? All fair game....

Duncan W. Allen, Michael Dobson, Sean McMullen, Robert A. Metzger, Isaac Szpindel (m)

Saturday 1:00 p H302

The Greatest Living Science Fiction Writer

Who is it? What about fantasy? Why

John Clute (m), Gardner Dozois, Shawna McCarthy, George H. Scithers

Saturday 1:00 p H303

Maintaining a Long-Running Series

You're writing book XVII of your trilogy entitled Granny and Miles Party on Pern with Severian, Hermione, and Hammer's Slammers. How do you fit fresh inspirations into established frameworks? Fill in new readers without zonking old ones? And the fun part: which characters can you kill next

William C. Dietz

Saturday 1:00 p H304

The Next Fifty Years: Where Will the Next Big Things Come From

In December 2003, the Sunday New York Times identified "some developments today that could have profound effects tomorrowā the causes of the next big things." These included a growing elderly population in developed nations; unanticipated epidemics; pressures on democracy from religious fundamentalism and the campaign against terrorism; the Internet and the rise of movement politics; high tech warfare; and the spread of global capitalism. What wild cards and longer-term trends should be added to this list? With what consequences? Leading SF authors are invited to explore key factors expected to shape society over the next fifty years.

Gregory Benford, John G. Cramer, Thomas A. Easton (m), Larry Niven

Saturday 1:00 p H305

Fannish Rivalry

Why do some people insist on a rivalry between literary and media SF, when so many of us like both? Ah, rivalries. And there are several others besides media vs. lit, comics vs. lit., convention vs. fanzine fans, etc. Besides the usual compare and contrast, the question is: Why can't we just all get along? Why do we have these rivalries anyway

Chris Barkley, Tom Galloway (m), Daniel Kimmel, Bey King

Saturday 1:00 p H306

What the Writer Needs to Know...

-- that doesn't get in the published story. A published story has a beginning, middle, and end. But, there are events that occur before the story starts, the characters haves lives [well, not always, if the story starts with the birth of the character or before then] before and after and story, and the writer needs to know more information about people, events, geography, and history of the characters and settings, that the reader is ever going to see. Just how much does the writer need to know, and what happens when the writer doesn't know? Can it be faked, and/or what can be left out? And when it is time to trim out events and plots and themes that might be interesting to the writer and have been part of the impetus to write a story, but which turn out to be extraneous to what the publishable story is about

Robert Reed, Lawrence Watt-Evans, Martha Wells, Scott Westerfeld (m)

Saturday 1:00 p H307

Game Designers' Tips and Tricks

"I've got this great idea for a game..." Are you sure? How can you turn your idea into the next Monopoly of Fluxx? What goes into a good RPG or LARP? Learn from the experts.

James Cambias (m), Leigh Grossman, Thomas Harlan, Michael McAfee

Saturday 1:00 p H309

Biological Nanotechnology

It's getting so you can't swing a cat without hitting a science fiction story that has some element of nanotechnology in it, and the media is all over nanotech like stink on a skunk. How will nanotechnology impact our lives and our health" Is nanotech the next big thin (no pun intended_ or is it just a load of hype and hooey? What's "condensed matter?" Should you be worried about gray goo? Get the straight skinny (or at least all the skinny that's fit to present) from an expert in the field, with a multimedia slide presentation.

Stephen C. Lee

Saturday 1:00 p H310

Order in the (Alien?) Court!

What happens when you're accused of a crime on another planet? How have writers handled this in the past - from Heinlein's "Have Spacesuit, will Travel" to the Klingon court in "The Undiscovered Country" Is it possible to write about methods of dispensing justice without depending on Terran history? Is the idea of justice itself an Earth concept" While we're on the topic of justice and crime, will the Demolished Man's psychic cops actually prevent crime? What are the implications of the increasing dependence on technology in police and forensics work? How will we catch Gully Foyle

Christopher Cevasco (m), Harold Feld, John G. Hemry, Jack Speer, Lisa J. Steele

Saturday 1:00 p H311

Reinventing Genre Fantasy

With so much genre fantasy being published, what can be done to refresh our jaded palates

Hilari L. Bell, Debra Doyle (m), Elizabeth Hand, Alex Irvine, Katherine Kurtz

Saturday 1:00 p H312

Tradeoffs between Freedom, Security, and Privacy

Is she free? Is he secure? Should we know? It seems that to get more of one thing, you have to give up something else. Since different people want different levels of freedom, security, and privacy, how can we reach a societal consensus on the tradeoffs....especially since smart dust will watch everything we do, scanning technologies will monitor what we thin, and microbots will take action!? Where is all this going (where should it go?), and what can we do? Is Big Brother coming at last, just a bit behind schedule

Cory Doctorow, Joseph Lazzaro, James Macdonald, Don Sakers (m), Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Saturday 1:00 p Art Show

Ellen James, harpist

Edward James

Saturday 1:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Kage Baker, Jim Butcher, Tanya Huff, Don Maitz, Terry McGarry, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Nick Sagan

Saturday 1:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Eileen Gunn, Paul Levinson, Michael Whelan

Saturday 1:00 p Beacon D

Turning Rubbings Into Alien Creations (7-12)

With some inspiration from a master and using crayons, paper, found objects and a little imagination, make creatures from other worlds.

Jael

Saturday 1:00 p Beacon E

D&D Character Roll [ages 7+] (Arthur Shattan)

Beginning D&D (Dungeons and Dragons) session; come learn how to play.

Saturday 1:00 p Beacon F

Magnetic Bookmark [ages 5-8]

Stopping in the middle of a page can be so confusing when you get back to reading. Create a fun paper bookmark that will mark the line to start reading again.

Saturday 1:00 p Clarendon

Spicing Up Your Filk Performance

Looking at voices, accents, face and body expression, pacing, and...

Bill Sutton, Brenda Sutton

Saturday 1:00 p ConCourse

Fan History Tour

Mike Resnick

Saturday 1:00 p Dalton

Drawing the Human Figure in the Action Pose

Are drawings and paintings looking a bit staid and stale? Take a second look at your figures, can they be better? This lecture-demo addresses stiff or tired figures and attempts to evoke an emotion from a sense of action in the drawing stage (even in a sitting or lying character). In the Collectible Card Games business, the art gets reduced down so small that the action has to be instantly recognizable. Therefore, emphasis will be placed on drawing the figure in contrapasto (counter pose), exaggerating the look of movement, balance and perspective to convey an action scene in an instant.. Examples of masters and comic artists will reinforce the theme.

Ed Cox

Saturday 1:00 p Exeter

Reading

Mitchell Freedman

Saturday 1:00 p Gardner

Daggers and Shields and Swords, Oh My! (7-12)

Have at you! Witness the subtle skills of attack, parry, and grapple, as the combat arts of the sword and buckler, dagger, longsword, and smallsword are brought to life in this presentation by the Higgins Armory Sword Guild.

Saturday 1:00 p Grand Ballroom

Trailer Park

Saturday 1:00 p Hampton

Reading

Frederik Pohl

Saturday 1:00 p Independence

Shadowrun RPG: What Lies in the Dark Part One: Snatch and Grab

Some idiot has hired you to go down to the cape and make some easy money. Some dotty old recluse has a very rare antique that your handler has hired you to retrieve. The whole job looks easy. The island has little in the way of security and just happens to be far enough from shore that the UCAS Coast Guard won't even know you're there. If all goes well you might even stop in Hyannis and grab some rays before heading up to Bean Town. This should be money in the bank."Click - Whirr - sputter Uhhh what was that? [6 players, May bring your own character up to 30 Karma, or use a pre-generated character.]

Saturday 1:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Colleen Doran, Elizabeth Moon, Charles Oberndorf, Melinda Snodgrass

Saturday 1:00 p Republic B

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms

Retro Hugo Nominee for Dramatic Presentation

Saturday 1:30 p H203

Teaching With, vs. Teaching About SF

Priscilla Olson

Saturday 1:30 p H204

Breaking In

Author, agent, editor talk about how to get that first novel sold.

Joshua Bilmes, Moshe Feder, Brandon Sanderson

Saturday 1:30 p H210

Filk One-Shots Concert

Saturday 1:30 p H303

Fifty Ways to Leave the Planet.

Non-obvious ways to get into space - each in 30 seconds (or less!)

Jordin T. Kare

Saturday 1:30 p Beacon A

Magic Show [ages 3-6] (Daniel Dern)

Daniel Dern works some of his magic and storytelling for you.

Saturday 1:30 p Dalton

How to Write a Fight Scene

James Alan Gardner

Saturday 1:30 p Exeter

Reading

Roger MacBride Allen

Saturday 1:30 p Gardner

Roman Legionary and Gothic Knight (7-12)

The Romas conquered the known world two thousand years ago. The knight was the most powerful force on the battlefield five hundred years ago. Each wore plate armor and carried a sword, a spear, and a dagger, but they were very different. Come hear a Legionary and Knight explain their equipment and how they fought, and try to guess what would happen if they were to face each other in battle.

Saturday 1:30 p Hall A

Music

Saturday 1:30 p Hampton

Reading

Allen Steele

Saturday 1:45 p H203

Using SF to Teach About.... (1.5 hours)

An academic roundtable

Michael A. Burstein (m), Barbara Chepaitis, Theodora Goss, Leslie Howle, Larry A. Lebofsky, Dennis Livingston

Saturday 2:00 p H100

Blood and Cardstock Players Choice

Open demo session. Learn how to play exciting games like Showbiz and Counting ZZZs.

Saturday 2:00 p H107

What's New from Warner Aspect

Come listen to Jaime Levine, Editorial Director, and Devi Pillar, Assistant Editor, tell you about the next year's worth of titles from Warner. We'll have book giveaways and contests. Authors Greg Benford, Karin Lowachee, Alison Baird and Kevin J. Anderson will be giving readings or short talks.

Saturday 2:00 p H205

The Future of Energy

Our economy is currentyly dependent on sources of energy that are depetable and/or located in politically unstable regions. How long can we really count on oil? What are the realistic prospects for moving to a more sustainable enenergy system? Any role for fusion, solar power satellites and other fossil fuel replacenents? What is the role of better energy storage systems? Are there any real prospects for compact "off-the-grid" power? And since technical fixes can only take us so far towards a sustainable energy ecology, what about more fundamental changes in llfe styles, consumption values and conservation

Catherine Asaro, David Friedman, David Nichols, Samuel Scheiner (m), David Stephenson

Saturday 2:00 p H206

Remembering Hal Clement

For decades, the Boston area's beloved Hal Clement/Harry Stubbs (1922 - 2003) was best-known for a novel issued in 1953. But "Mission of Gravity" was succeeded by at least 10 more --- the last ("Noise") published the month before his death. Let's recall our friend's lifeflong scientific rigor, human vigor, optimism, and faith in the transformative power of curiosity. He was a writer and a gentleman, and was taken from us far too soon. Remember him.

Matthew Jarpe, Anthony R. Lewis, Shane Tourtellotte

Saturday 2:00 p H208

Reading/Film

Resa Nelson

Saturday 2:00 p H210

Concert

Mary Crowell

Saturday 2:00 p H301

What Do You Passionately Read

....Besides Fantasy and SF? Of course you want to finish that new trilogy (which has suddenly expanded to five books), but even the most devoted fans have other interests. Bibliophiles get together to discuss the non-SF/F books they love, from historical fiction to murder mysteries to biographies, and other stops in between.

Chris Barkley (m), Laura Anne Gilman, Mary Kay Kare, Toni L. P. Kelner, Lawrence Watt-Evans

Saturday 2:00 p H302

Whatever Became of the Space Merchants

....and where did the broad heavy-handed satire go? (and why?)

Steve Carper (m), Mitchell Freedman, Harry Harrison, Barry N. Malzberg, Frederik Pohl

Saturday 2:00 p H303

The Perils of Promotion

How do you promote your work? What are some of the backlashes you might encounter? How can conventions hurt or help

Steve Antczak, Paula Guran, Jay Caselberg, Ben Jeapes (m), Jean Lorrah, Theresa Mather

Saturday 2:00 p H304

Great Cliches in SF and Fantasy

Hidden powers, quirky sidekicks, true names.....bookish teens, rebel cops, sexy robots, haircut aliens.....Devils' bargains (quashed by lemon laws), and Dark Lords without impulse control...splitting up to look for the monster!....Dueling till the death (or, the sequel?). Take a look at the really good (well, maybe in the eye of the beholder?) cliches of the field, and tell us what makes them so popular.

Don D'Ammassa, Craig Gardner, David Levine (m), Josepha Sherman, S. M. Stirling

Saturday 2:00 p H305

Lies I Learned at the Movies

Let's discuss at least a few of the thousands or scientific facts that movies teach us -- that turn out not to be true. Our favorite: the title of the 1969 "historical" epic about a volcano disaster, "Krakatoa, East of Java" ....um...it's WEST....

Bob Devney (m), Tamara Jones, Peter Morwood, John Pomeranz, John Scalzi

Saturday 2:00 p H306

Alternate Prehistory

Do new discoveries in paleontology offer ideas for alternate history? Is this prehistory an untapped resource for alternate history

Robert Buettner, David C. Kopaska-Merkel, Robert J. Sawyer (m), Michael Swanwick

Saturday 2:00 p H307

Living With a Martian

Mary Turzillo

Saturday 2:00 p H309

Pictures from Mars

AV show - the latest and greatest from the red planet.... The Spirit and Opportunity Rovers and the Mars Express orbiter have shown that Mars was once a wet world. How wet and for how long? What else have we learned about Mars from the mountains of data they have returned? How good is the evidence for life on Mars? What should the next rovers do? What can a sample return mission tell us? What can astronauts add

Geoffrey A. Landis

Saturday 2:00 p H310

Writing the Young Female Protagonist

From Podkayne of Mars to Alanna of Tortall, young girls have been some of the most vivid and well-loved characters in science fiction and fantasy. How does one write such a character? If you yourself are not a young girl. how can you get into the mindset t make your character believable

Anne Harris, Mindy Klasky, Louise Marley, Tamora Pierce, Mary H. Rosenblum (m), E. Rose Sabin

Saturday 2:00 p H311

If Rome Never Fell...

Imagine...two millennia of Roman rule.... Rome continues to fascinate writers. There have been a number of novels set in Ancient Rome, including several popular mystery series. Rome has been the setting for a number of popular fantasies. And a number of science fiction books have based their societies loosely (or not so loosely) on that of Rome. The panel looks at the continuing lure of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire.

Esther Friesner, Thomas Harlan, Mark L. Olson (m), Susan Shwartz, Robert Silverberg, Harry Turtledove

Saturday 2:00 p H312

How to Use Science and Technology in SF -- or, Should We

Loosely patterned after the 1951 Worldcon (Nolacon) topic "More -- Science in Science Fiction -- Less" Verne's "Nautilus," the fully automated culture in "The Machine Stops," the two-way video in 1984, the computerized political data base in Double Star, Asimovés robotics, organlegging in Larry Nivenés stories--when does something resonate and when doesn't it? Are there any general principles? Most importantly....Is it actually necessary???? What are the merits of science fantasy vs. science fiction....

John G. Cramer, Terry Franklin, Rosemary Kirstein, Larry Niven, G. David Nordley (m)

Saturday 2:00 p Art Show

Art Show Tour

Suford Lewis

Saturday 2:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Lois McMaster Bujold, David B. Coe, Kathryn Cramer, Diane Duane, Phyllis Eisenstein, George R. R. Martin, Jeff VanderMeer

Saturday 2:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Daniel Hatch, Melissa Scott, Liz Williams

Saturday 2:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Saturday 2:00 p Beacon D

LOTR: The Movie or the Book? (7-12)

Each of these art forms has some advantages. What are they? Tolkien fan and movie buff, jan howard finder went to New Zealand to see the movie set, and has much to say about it. Compare your ideas with other LotR fans.

jan howard finder

Saturday 2:00 p Beacon F

Story time [ages 1-6]

Listen to some fun tales.

Saturday 2:00 p Clarendon

Harmony Workshop

Basics of adding harmonies to melody: where, when and how. Emphasis on vocal harmonies, both planned and ad hoc.

Lynn Gold

Saturday 2:00 p Con Suite Foyer

Music

Saturday 2:00 p Dalton

Self-Publishing/Selling Quality Commercial Art Books

Designing a book of photographs as art, the brave new world of digital printing, and why it is so cool, designing a book of photographs technically so that it goes to press without problems. How to find and work with a press. Marketing, distribution, etc. When is it all worth it

Laurie Toby Edison, Geri Sullivan

Saturday 2:00 p Exeter

Reading

Kelly Link

Saturday 2:00 p Gardner

Have Wand, Will Travel [ages 7-12] (Bill Brang)

Magic Show, especially for kids

Saturday 2:00 p Hampton

Reading

Brian W. Aldiss

Saturday 2:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Katya Reimann, Mike Resnick, Jonathan Strahan, Connie Willis

Saturday 2:00 p Liberty C

Stratificational Linguistics Discussion Group (Christopher Hatton)

....or Why I Sometimes Scream While Watching Stargate SG-i)

Saturday 2:15 p H209

Maetel Legend [Subtitled]

Saturday 2:30 p H206

Remembering Julie Schwartz

Julie Schwartz was a well-known SF and comics personality who died over the last year. He had an interesting history, having published the "first" fanzine, and then was a literary agent for numerous SF authors. He created the "silver age" of comic book superheroes, and had a hand in the creation of comics fandom. Remember him.

Bob Greenberger (m), Barry Short, Jerry Weist

Saturday 2:30 p H210

Concert

Bill Sutton, Brenda Sutton

Saturday 2:30 p H307

Surgery in Space

Robert I. Katz

Saturday 2:30 p Dalton

Interfacing Art: Illustration and Written Sf

Janny Wurts

Saturday 2:30 p Exeter

Reading

Elizabeth Hand

Saturday 2:30 p Hampton

Reading

Gary K. Wolf

Saturday 2:30 p Republic B

Invaders from Mars

Retro Hugo Nominee for Dramatic Presentation

Saturday 3:00 p H203

Computer Game Technologies and Education

Henry Jenkins

Saturday 3:00 p H204

Toward a Posthuman Future

Is it even possible for humans, including science fiction writers, to imagine a future without humans

Frank White

Saturday 3:00 p H205

Smallville

The hip and edgy story of Clark Kent's teenage years in a Kansas farm town caught fire when it appeared on TV in 2001. Why does this series work so well? Is it the weird effects of Kryptonite? Clark's slow development of his super-powers? Guest stars such as his real father, Jor-El? What other people from the greater Superman stories would you like to see -- or is there a limit on how many future hints we can take

Michael A. Burstein, Pam Fremon, Tom Galloway (m), Kimberly Ann Kindya, Nicki Lynch

Saturday 3:00 p H206

Tough Love for New Writers

Give it up: there are already too many writers. Let's face it, even with a lot of help, the best to be expected from most new writers is that they will produce a lot of mediocre sludge. In fact, most people who attend "how to" panels at conventions won't even do that well. Moreover, there are is already so much good to read that the field doesn't need such sludge. The panel's advice to wannabe writers: give it up now and get a real job. (An honest appraisal of the new writer's chances.)

Gavin Grant, David G. Hartwell, Steve Miller, Priscilla Olson (m), Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Saturday 3:00 p H208

A Chuck Jones Tribute

The great animator gave us the Retro Hugo nominee "Duck Dodgers."..but what are the essential Chuck Jones works, and why is he still so influential today

Paul Barnett, Pamela Scoville

Saturday 3:00 p H209

Final Yamato [Subtitled]

Saturday 3:00 p H210

SF Cabaret

Welcome, welkommen, bienvenue to the SF Cabaret...a presentation of works touching on SF and fantasy themes. Not filk, not folk, not quite jazz, but an art form with similarities to those genres devoted mostly to presenting classic American songs and show tunes or recent material written in that style in intimate club settings. Why shouldn't modern cabaret songs reflect SF and Fantasy concerns anyway? Here are some that do.

Dennis Livingston

Saturday 3:00 p H301

Creativity on Demand

Your first novel took five years to craft. Now you've got a deadline and an editor breathing down your neck. How do published authors cope with the pressure of deadlines and editor/reader expectations? What tips can they share for coping with the times when your muse won't Cooperate and you still need to produce ten thousand words by Friday

Patricia Bray, Keith R. A. DeCandido, William C. Dietz (m), Stephen P. Kelner, Rebecca Moesta, Deborah Ross

Saturday 3:00 p H302

Novels You Write/Novels You Talk about in Bars

Well, first of all, are they your own or someone else's? And if they're your own, are you just talking instead of actually writing them? Will the story you end up writing be as good as the one you talked about

Ellen Kushner (m), James Macdonald, James Morrow, Charles Oberndorf, Charles Stross, Robert Charles Wilson

Saturday 3:00 p H303

Stem Cell Research

How can we (should we???) encourage re-thinking the opposition to it? What are the promises of this research

Jed Shumsky

Saturday 3:00 p H304

Who Thought of That, Why, and How Come It's So Popular

A look at some of the seminal ideas of modern SF.

Don D'Ammassa, Anthony R. Lewis, James Minz (m), Darrell Schweitzer

Saturday 3:00 p H305

Alternate History Challenge Match

Panelists get a weird alternate present, and have to reverse-engineer how it came about....

Michael Dobson, Mitchell Freedman, Peter J. Heck, Evelyn C. Leeper, S. M. Stirling, Toni Weisskopf (m)

Saturday 3:00 p H306

Vamps

In the Middle Ages they tore your throat out; in the Victorian Age, death was sex, so ambiguity allowed some extra thrills. Now, in our....differently....repressed age, vampires are both openly sexy and sympathetic. Is our culture growing up, or just getting very very kinky? What are the challenges and advantages to breathing new life into the un-dead? And when (why?) did the vampire go from serious to silly....when did decadence become decadent

Ellen Datlow, Charlaine Harris, Tanya Huff (m), Cecilia Tan

Saturday 3:00 p H307

The Stfnal Clubman

How's your SF club doing? Ideas for starting, reviving or killing off a local science-fiction club. What can people do in their own community to gather together fans? How do you build up membership? What pitfalls should you be aware of? (And why you should join NESFA even if you don't live here,,?)

Genny Dazzo, David R. Howell, John Pomeranz, Hank Reinhardt, Sharon Sbarsky (m), Diane Turnshek

Saturday 3:00 p H309

Authors or Editors: who is closest to the readers

Magazine submissions are judged by editors whereas contests are usually judged by writers. Do they select different types of stories? If they do select different types of stories, then which of them (editors or authors) are more representative of the tastes of the readers

Paul DiFilippo (m), Carl Frederick, Beth Meacham, Patrick Nielsen Hayden

Saturday 3:00 p H310

If There Were No "Star Wars."..

....There might not have been an SF media boon in the '80s (and Spielberg's career would end after the disastrous "1941."...and Harrison Ford would have been working as a carpenter and never met Calista Flockhart.....). And there would be no ST:TNG, since the marketplace could not yet support a fourth network (i.e., Paramount)..... Keep on working through the ripples. Where would we be

Chris Barkley, Steven Sawicki, Lawrence Schoen, Ben Yalow

Saturday 3:00 p H311

The SF/F Detective

Why are so many SF/F detectives cast in the somewhat pulpy hard-boiled Private Eye mode? (And is there anything wrong with that???) Discuss what makes a good genre mystery guy.

Charles Ardai (m), Barbara Chepaitis, Simon R. Green, Paul Levinson, John Zakour

Saturday 3:00 p H312

Can SF Change the World

Utopias and dystopias and everything in between.....How has SF influenced the people actually inventing the future? Was any of today's world inspired by the sf of the past? What of today's sf will inspire the future? And, can sf warn of about futures we don't want

Daniel Hatch (m), Elizabeth Anne Hull, Stephen C. Lee, Ernest Lilley, Mark W. Tiedemann

Saturday 3:00 p Art Show

Tour of the Retro Art Exhibit

Joe Siclari

Saturday 3:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Catherine Asaro, Carol Berg, John Betancourt, Jeffrey A. Carver, Robert A. Metzger, Chris Moriarty, Melissa Scott

Saturday 3:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Geary Gravel, Rosemary Kirstein, Don Maitz, Charlie Petit, Ann Tonsor Zeddies

Saturday 3:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Saturday 3:00 p Beacon D

Tamora Pierce Get-Together (7-12)

Come talk with the popular YA author about her books, her ideas, recording with Full Cast Audioā (Kids only, please!)

Tamora Pierce

Saturday 3:00 p Beacon E

D&D Game [ages 7+] (Arthur Shattan)

Beginning D&D (Dungeons and Dragons) session; come learn how to play.

Saturday 3:00 p Beacon F

Magic Wands [ages 2-12]

Turn a chopstick into a magic wand to bring your imagination to life.

Saturday 3:00 p Clarendon

Parody Workshop

There's parody,and then there's parody which is cleverly constructed, involves wordplay and draws on the original material for both style and meaning. Some basics from the acknowledged master.

Bob Kanefsky

Saturday 3:00 p Dalton

Turn Left at Orion: Using a Small Telescope

You keep hearing about all this near stuff in the sky, but you never manage to go out and seen any of it. What do you need to go look for these fascinating objects? How much can you see with binoculars, a small telescope, or just the unaided eye and a dark sky? Experts talk about the possibilities.

Guy Consolmagno

Saturday 3:00 p Exeter

Reading

P. J. Plauger

Saturday 3:00 p Gardner

Instant Costuming Challenge (7-12)

Create your own costume with the help of expert costumers! Then wear it to the Time Travel Dance right after this panel.

Thomas Atkinson, Ming Diaz

Saturday 3:00 p Grand Ballroom

Special Studio Sneak Preview

Saturday 3:00 p Hampton

Reading

Jack Dann

Saturday 3:00 p Independence

Deryni Adventure

Join Ann Dupuis, publisher of the upcoming Deryni Adventure Game, for a roleplaying adventure involving Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of travelling performers. Katherine Kurts is co-GM for this adventure.

Saturday 3:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Brian W. Aldiss, Jack L. Chalker, Stanley Schmidt, Sarah Zettel

Saturday 3:00 p Liberty A

Bujold Fandom Discussion Group (Jerrie Adkins)

Saturday 3:00 p Republic A

Ruin Explorers [Subtitled] [Not Rated]

Saturday 3:00 p Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon) - Tom Veal

Saturday 3:30 p H303

The Author as a Brand

What shapes an author's brand image -- and who does a great job of branding? Why is it great? How does the co-branding of their books impact authors? What can authors do to improve their brand images

Sean M. Mead

Saturday 3:30 p Exeter

Reading

James Alan Gardner

Saturday 3:30 p Hampton

Reading

Jo Walton

Saturday 4:00 p H100

Camelot Legends

Quest with King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Players assemble companies of knights and compete with their opponents to complete quests. Once the final adventure is complete, the players with the most glory shall be victorious! [2-4 players]

Saturday 4:00 p H107

Eos Presents Upcoming SF/F Titles

Eos Senior Editor Diana Gill and Jack Womack present the upcoming titles of interest from Eos and HarperCollins, including books by Neal Stephenson, Terry Pratchett, Dave Duncan, Sean Russell and more. Join us for handouts, contests, and candy, plus the best new science fiction and fantasy for Fall 2004.

Saturday 4:00 p H203

How to Design Your Academic Career for a Job in Space

An imaginative (not prescriptive) approach to making college really work.

jan howard finder

Saturday 4:00 p H204

Lyrical Language

Is it a good idea to bounce the reader out of the story by making her aware of how beautifully you write? Define "beautifully." And, under any circumstances, is "style" really so necessary

Fruma Klass, Justine Larbalestier (m), Kelly Link, Terry McGarry, Delia Sherman

Saturday 4:00 p H205

BAD Con Advice for Newbies

Please - bring a sense of irony! Fannish etiquette, with a twist.....

David Levine, Laurie Mann, Sandra McDonald, Priscilla Olson

Saturday 4:00 p H206

Speculative Physics and Space Travel

Wormholes, quantum teleportation, and other ideas on the edge of modern physics are all fair game!

Dave Clements, John G. Cramer, Les Johnson (m), Henry Spencer

Saturday 4:00 p H301

Why is Everyone So Scared of Genre Poetry

Or is it just that people are scared of poetry???

John M. Ford, Joe Haldeman, David C. Kopaska-Merkel (m), Janna Silverstein

Saturday 4:00 p H302

The Numinous in Science Fiction and Fantasy

Okay, we know that "numinous" isn't a noun, but there is something, well, noun-like in the way some authors can invoke a feeling about stuff beyond our everyday experience. But the numinous does seem to show up more in our genre than in most others. Why? Why can some authors do this so effortlessly, while others try to get us there and don't quite make it? (And it is so often missed!) And why would a bunch of rational, science oriented people care about that kind of thing in the first place? Is this because SF is at its roots interested in the same things as fantasy and fantasy has a particularly close relationship with the numinous, or is it just that the numinous is a great way to get a Sensawonder fix

Lois McMaster Bujold, James Macdonald (m), James Morrow, Deborah Ross

Saturday 4:00 p H303

The Writer and Role-Playing Games

How can playing role-playing games help/hurt your writing

Michael Dobson, Michael Gilmartin, Thomas Harlan, Walter H. Hunt (m), Wil McDermott

Saturday 4:00 p H304

Postcapitalist Social Mechanisms

A look at the reality and potential of such things as reputation/abundance/gift economies, and the like -- as found in Doctorow's "Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom," Stross's Macx stories, and a wealth of others.....such as fandom itself???

M. M. Buckner, Cory Doctorow, David Friedman (m), Benjamin Rosenbaum, Charles Stross

Saturday 4:00 p H305

The Business of Art: What New Artists Need to Know

At conventions alone, there's framing to hanging to personal presentation to closing a sale -- not to mention the ins and out of prints and record keeping. And overall, there's promotion, copyrights, artists' organizations, sales tax, contacts ... Knowledgeable people pass on their expertise.

Paul Barnett (m), Ctein, Thomas Kidd, Don Maitz, Theresa Mather, Margaret Organ-Kean

Saturday 4:00 p H306

Seduction of the Innocent....

Hey little girl....wanna read some Heinlein? How can you keep your children from growing up mundane

Janice M. Eisen, Laura Frankos (m), Beth Hilgartner, Louise Marley, Persis Thorndike

Saturday 4:00 p H307

The Fruit Fly Genome, in C Major

Discussion and demonstration of a program to translate the fruit fly genome into "music."

Carl Frederick

Saturday 4:00 p H309

Art for Video Games

For those of you who enjoy video games, here's a chance to see a little bit about how they are made. From concept artwork to modeling and texturing, there's a lot of work that goes on behind the scenes before game characters make it into the game.

Mike Dashow

Saturday 4:00 p H310

Snowball Earth: When the Planet Froze

At least twice between about 750 and 600 million years ago, the Earth froze over -- literally. Glaciers rolled over the equatorial regions and ice movered most of the planet. The last ice age was a mere light frost in comparsion.... A talk by the proposer of the theory, with a look at past and future climatological conditions on the Earth (i.e., global warming or another big freeze....?)

Paul Hoffman

Saturday 4:00 p H311

Alien Genres

What will non-human romance novels be like? Alien mysteries? Westerns? Science Fiction??

Elizabeth Caldwell, Tanya Huff, Sue Krinard, Michelle Sagara West (m), Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Saturday 4:00 p H312

Is SF "Respectable"

How do others see us? Discuss the joys and sorrows of telling others you're a SF writer/artist/fan. What are your interlocutors' first reactions? Are we getting any more respect lately? Why do film-makers and novelists insist their stories of technological and social change in the future are "not really science fiction?" Is SF the Rodney Dangerfield genre? Will mundanes ever stop the Trekkie trash talk

Bob Eggleton, Fred Lerner, Robert J. Sawyer, Karen Traviss, Pat York (m)

Saturday 4:00 p Autographing

Autographing

David G. Hartwell, Alex Irvine, Katya Reimann, Robert Silverberg, Jack Speer, Scott Westerfeld

Saturday 4:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

George R. R. Martin, Michael Swanwick, Mary Turzillo

Saturday 4:00 p Beacon A

Playground Games [ages 4-7]

Play basic rule games in a more organized manner than open playtime (Duck, Duck, Goose; Animal Tag; Simon Says, etc)

Saturday 4:00 p Beacon D

Movie Critic for a Day (7-12)

Have an opinion on the movies geared towards kids these days? Have a big favorite? Voice your opinions with a professional movie critic, and hear what he has to say.

Daniel Kimmel

Saturday 4:00 p Beacon F

Origami for the Young [ages 4-6]

Japanese paper folding with big sheets of fun paper and a few simple folds.

Saturday 4:00 p Clarendon

Culture-Building Workshop (2 hours)

(Limited to 30)

Hilari L. Bell

Saturday 4:00 p Dalton

Adaptive Technology for Diasabilities: Artificial Vision

Joseph Lazzaro

Saturday 4:00 p Exeter

Reading

James Stevens-Arce

Saturday 4:00 p Fan Lounge

DUFF/TAFF Reception

Saturday 4:00 p Gardner

Time Travel Dance (7-12)

Bring your time machine and dancing feet! Costumes encouraged. Wear your favorite costume, or one you've just made, and dance from the Renaissance to the Presentā

Susan de Guardiola

Saturday 4:00 p Hall A

SFWA Musketeers

Melanie Fletcher, Esther Friesner, Laura Anne Gilman, Jay Caselberg, John G. Hemry, Lee Martindale, Elizabeth Moon, Vera Nazarian, Madeleine E. Robins, Susan Shwartz, Steven H. Silver, Laura Underwood, Liz Williams and Selina Rosen

Saturday 4:00 p Hampton

Reading

Sheila Finch

Saturday 4:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Lisa Barnett, James Alan Gardner, Bob Greenberger, Mark W. Tiedemann

Saturday 4:00 p Liberty A

Writing and Publishing Erotica Discussion Group

Saturday 4:00 p Liberty C

Buffy/Angel Discussion Group (Anne Davenport)

Saturday 4:00 p Republic B

Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2 Century

Retro Hugo Nominee for Dramatic Presentation

Saturday 4:04 p Republic B

The War of the Worlds

Retro Hugo Nominee for Dramatic Presentation

Saturday 4:30 p H203

The Seminal Role of Mary Shelley

Frankenstein has been called the first SF novel. It introduced such themes as the ethics of science, the nature of life, and the way humans may react to the alien (and vice versa.) What was Shelley's actual influence on subsequent SF

Brian W. Aldiss

Saturday 4:30 p H307

Elizabethan English as a Second Language

Can thee speak Elizabethan English....or dost thou know that should be "canst thou"? Verily, Elizabethan English is oft misused in historical and fantasy writing. Advice on how to write it correctly, or at least mangle it knowingly.

Kage Baker

Saturday 4:30 p Dalton

Clothing & Costume in Literary SF/Fantasy

What you wear determines how you move, what you can and cannot do, and where you can go. What other issues can be affected by your dress? An examination of the field.

Thomas Atkinson

Saturday 4:30 p Exeter

Reading

John Scalzi

Saturday 5:00 p H102

Concert by New England Guitar Circle

Saturday 5:00 p H102

New England Guitar Circle

Students of Robert Fripp play complex polyrhythmic music

Saturday 5:00 p H203

SLOFs: Who and Why

The Secret Librarians of Fandom are lurking everywhere, waiting to pounce on you with recommended reading or a good place to research X. Who are they? Why are they in fandom? Why are they librarians? How you can avoid them or find them when you need them

Mary Kay Kare, Fred Lerner (m), Steve Miller, Val Ontell, Don Sakers

Saturday 5:00 p H204

The Brain, the Universe, Consciousness, and Free Will

Why do we feel like we have free will even though all the neuroscientific evidence says it's an illusion? Is it possible to fit true free will into the universe as modern physics understands it? Where does consciolusness come from? Would a sufficiently complex computer have it (and an illusion of free will to boot)? Van presents a complete theory of the nature of consciousness and free will that answers these and other questions: no prior background in physics, neuroscience, or philosophy of mind needed.

Eric M. Van

Saturday 5:00 p H205

How Does SF Portray Islam

What portrayal of Islam? The religion and culture of the Muslim world are infrequently the subjects of SF stories, which says something about the parochial nature of much of the genre; and when they do come up, it is in stereotypical ways. Yet Islam has evolved and diversified in as many ways as Christianity; there is no reason to think it won't continue to do so, on this world or others.

Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Shariann Lewitt, Harry Turtledove (m), Sarah Zettel

Saturday 5:00 p H206

Pulp Eye for the Art Guy

Wherein the Rubber Science Guy, the Stereotype Guy, the Bad Prose Style Guy, the Twisty Plot Guy, and the Fan Guy all offer advice to the hopeless artiste!

Keith R. A. DeCandido, Alex Irvine, Matthew Jarpe, Kelly Link, Allen Steele (m)

Saturday 5:00 p H210

The Filkado

A fannish operetta by Gary McGath and Terry Wells. See how many puns you can catch as the Punsman -- who uses his brain as a weapon to create a pun barrage against evilodoers -- defends the planet Nesfa from the depredations of the music pirates led by the lovely Captain D.J. Thoris. The Punsman is aided by the Nesfanese Lord High Evil Genius., Dr. McKoko, and the great military leader Commader Tomakatisha.

Harold Feld, Suford Lewis, Mark Mandel, Michael McAfee, Gary D. McGath, Timothy L. Smith

Saturday 5:00 p H301

The Sidewise Award

On this timeline, at least, the Sidewise Award for Alternate History was established in 1995 to recognize the best stories and novels of the year in that subgenre. See you there, when and if.

Evelyn C. Leeper, Steven H. Silver

Saturday 5:00 p H302

The Monster in the Maze

There is a monster. It's lurking in the shadows, waiting. There is always a monster. It might be the Minotaur in the Labyrinth of Crete or an alien aboard a deserted spaceship, but it is always there. Why? What is the monster, if it's more than the dark shadow of the self. Explore the monsters that haunt our sleeping and waking hours, and how we may (with luck and wisdom) find and defeat them. Discuss some works that did this (and examine if they did it successfully)

Stephen Dedman, Neil Gaiman, Simon R. Green, Yves Meynard, Robert Sheckley

Saturday 5:00 p H303

How to Make a Hugo Rocket

Peter Weston

Saturday 5:00 p H304

Technology Today!

Is the personal computer "moribund" (Charlie Stross), and have no technological toys taken its place, Show and tell about the newest and (weirdest)! - and what's in store in the near future

Mark L. Olson, P. J. Plauger, Edie Stern (m)

Saturday 5:00 p H305

Genetic Engineering....

...and frankenfoods, and post-human existence (fact and fiction), A discussion of the real and imagined dangers and possibilities of genetic engineering. They are not what you think.

Samuel Scheiner

Saturday 5:00 p H306

Meta-Gay: Has G/L/B/T Been Mainstreamed

Used to be you had to look long and hard to find g/l/b/t characters in science fiction and fantasy; now they're everywhere! And the list of our g/l/b/t genre authors could keep you reading for years. Is there anything unique that the g/l/b/t community still has to offer to science fiction and fantasy? To fandom? (The 2004 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards will be presented during this panel.)

Billie Aul (m), Melissa Scott, Jed Shumsky

Saturday 5:00 p H307

Geek Girls Unite!

What are the perils and benefits of lacking a Y-chromosome in the traditionally male-dominated worlds of science, technology, and science fiction? Examine gender dynamics, deconstruct cultural assumptions, and flaunt your geek pride in a roundtable discussion of how we girls really can do anything.

Liz Gorinsky

Saturday 5:00 p H309

Can SF Be Outdated

Is there a future for science fiction? Is it possible that SF as a literary genre has actually run its course? This seems like a strange question when SF has penetrated every corner of pop culture, from movies to video games, and most bookstores carry shelves devoted to a thriving output of new novels. But look more closely and what appears may be endless variations on clinched SF themes that arguably ran their course decades ago. Meanwhile, mundane reality seems to have caught up with SF in the daily newspaper, and a "sense of wonder" is available in any science magazine. Or is SF as we know it undergoing its own evolution in style and subject matter? Now that we're "in" the future, what is there to write about

John Clute, Gregory Feeley, Jay Lake, Dennis Livingston (m)

Saturday 5:00 p H310

Saluting Jack Williamson: Eight Decades, and Counting (1.5 hours)

Jack Williamson was born in 1908 in the Arizona Territory -- before it was a state. His family moved on to New Mexico in a covered wagon. Williamson published his first storyin 1928, coined the word "terraforming," and has lived to see spaceships and the Internet. At 94 years old, he is the oldest writer to win the Hugo and the Nebula. Come celebrate his work and the man himself, as we contemplate what Jack Williamson has in store for us in his next eight decades of writing...

Jack L. Chalker, Scott Edelman, Jim Frenkel, David G. Hartwell, Larry Niven, Frederik Pohl, Mike Resnick, Stanley Schmidt, Joe Siclari (m), Melinda Snodgrass, Jack Speer, Michael Swanwick, Eleanor Wood

Saturday 5:00 p H311

Pson of Psychohistory

Could Hari Seldon have been onto something? What are the really emergent social sciences, and what do they bode for the future

Steve Carper, Michael F. Flynn, Daniel Hatch (m), David McMahon, Charles Oberndorf

Saturday 5:00 p H312

SF Love Scenes

The group looks at great SF erotic love scenes. They discuss who does it well, and give examples. Panelists -- for amusement or instruction -- may also want to read examples of particularly bad ones.

Catherine Asaro (m), Jim Butcher, Wen Spencer, Karen Traviss, Paul Witcover

Saturday 5:00 p Art Show

Art Show Tour (Jane Frank)

Saturday 5:00 p Art Show

April Grant, fiddler

April Grant

Saturday 5:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Gregory Benford, Kathleen Kudlinski, Stephen Leigh, Terry Pratchett, Robert Reed, Karl Schroeder, Jim Young

Saturday 5:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

John G. Cramer, Ellen Kushner, Lawrence Schoen

Saturday 5:00 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Saturday 5:00 p Beacon D

Astronomy for KIDS (7-12)

Practice seeing the night sky, and learn about the wonders of the stars.

Larry A. Lebofsky

Saturday 5:00 p Beacon F

Rocks for Kids [ages 3-10]

Learn about and handle some of the precious stones that go into making beautiful jewelry from some one who knows.

Saturday 5:00 p Dalton

Using Feathers in Costuming

Carol Salemi

Saturday 5:00 p Exeter

Reading

Larry Ganem, John Zakour

Saturday 5:00 p Hampton

Student SF & F Contest Awards

John Pomeranz

Saturday 5:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Kevin J. Anderson, Debra Doyle, Rebecca Moesta, Andrew Porter, Toni Weisskopf

Saturday 5:00 p Republic A

Armitage III [Subtitled]

Saturday 5:00 p Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon)

Laurie Mann

Saturday 5:15 p H209

Queen Emeraldas [Subtitled]

Saturday 5:30 p H305

Beyond Hubble and Keck -- Really Big Telescopes

Between really big telescopes and other clever technologies, what can we find out about extrasolar planets -- and when (if ever) will it be worth going to visit them

Jordin T. Kare

Saturday 5:30 p Dalton

Workshop: Dramatic Posing and Costume Presentation

Ming Diaz, Carol Salemi

Saturday 5:30 p Exeter

Reading

Elizabeth Bear

Saturday 5:30 p Republic B

It Came from Outer Space

Retro Hugo Nominee for Dramatic Presentation

Saturday 6:00 p

Masquerade Registration Closes

Saturday 6:00 p H107

Fahrenheit 451

A round-table discussion of the 1953 Retro Hugo nominated novel.

Kenn Bates

Saturday 6:00 p H203

Alien Takeovers, Conspiracy and Paranoia Before and After "The Puppet Masters" (Oscar De Los Santos

Saturday 6:00 p H208

Klingon Documentary

Saturday 6:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Nicholas A. DiChario, Leigh Grossman, Thomas Harlan

Saturday 6:00 p ConCourse

Information Closes

Saturday 6:00 p ConCourse

Site Selection Voting Ends

Saturday 6:00 p Con Suite Foyer

Music

Saturday 6:00 p Exeter

Reading

Carrie Vaughn

Saturday 6:00 p Grand Ballroom

Robot Stories

Saturday 6:00 p Hall D

Dealers Closes

Saturday 6:30 p H100

Mechwarrior Tournament

Bring your mechanized army and test it in this Wizkids sanctioned tournament.

Saturday 6:30 p H203

Horror in the College Classroom: Teaching English Through a Gothic Lens (Mary Findley)

Saturday 6:30 p H210

New England Guitar Circle

Students of Robert Fripp play complex polyrhythmic music

Saturday 6:30 p Exeter

Reading

Lawrence Schoen

Saturday 7:00 p H209

Gundam Movie III [Subtitled]

Saturday 7:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Saturday 7:00 p Exeter

Reading

Pat York

Saturday 7:00 p Independence

Shadowrun RPG: What Lies in the Dark Part Two: Eenny, Meany, Mo: Catch a Wizard by His Toe

Hey Chummer you know the score. Wizards, people, and pets they all go missing. It happens. Money is money, and you're itching for cash. When a corporate benefactor pays for your schooling they expect you to work off the debt. (Indentured servitude is a reality in 2064 if you can't afford school.) If you decide to run off short of graduation they will find you. That's your job, find some snot nosed MIT&T punk, drug him and return him to whoever wants him. At least that's what you thought. Things made sense before this run, now all hell is breaking loose. Some knowledge of the system background is useful but not necessary. This is a direct tie in with 'What Lies in the Dark part One: Snatch and Grab." [6 players, May bring your own character up to 30 Karma, or use a pre-generated character.]

Saturday 7:00 p Republic A

Blue Seed 13 - 18 [Subtitled]

Saturday 7:00 p Republic B

Marvin the Martian Cartoons

Saturday 7:30 p Art Show

Music

Saturday 7:30 p Beacon D

Games and Crafts during the Hugos [ages 7+] (Randy Hoffman, Persis Thorndike)

Saturday 7:30 p Exeter

Reading

Robert I. Katz

Saturday 8:00 p H208

Free Enterprise

Saturday 8:00 p Auditorium

The Hugo Awards

Bestowing the most famous honor in science fiction, the Hugo ceremony is indeed The Big One. Come watch some of our most towering talents endure hours of squirm in hopes of one magnificent minute of squeal.

Neil Gaiman, William Tenn, Terry Pratchett, Jack Speer, Peter Weston

Saturday 8:00 p Beacon E

Gummi Wars (7-12)

It's a battle to the scrumptious death for these candy armies! The gummi candy has slowly been taking over shelf space at the candy shop. The traditional candy is angry they are losing favor. Tempers have built up and now it's an all out war to see who will win the shelf space! This is a 3-D tabletop war simulator that uses candy instead of miniatures. On one side you have the gummi candies. On the other you have the more traditional candies such as Peppermint Patties, Butterfinger bars, and even packs of chewing gum. Teams will be made at the start of the game.

Saturday 8:00 p Clarendon

Open Filk

Saturday 8:00 p Dalton

Open Filk - No taping

Saturday 8:00 p Gardner

Drum Circle

Saturday 8:00 p Hall A

Registration Closes

Saturday 9:00 p H100

Blood and Cardstock Games Players Choice

Open demo session. Learn exciting games like Showbiz and Counting ZZZs.

Saturday 9:00 p Conference

Filk Office Re-opens

Saturday 9:00 p Exeter

Rendezvous

Saturday 9:00 p Gardner

Open Filk

Saturday 9:00 p Hampton

Open Filk

Saturday 9:30 p Republic A

Filler (BS-Omake Theaters)

Saturday 10:00 p H205

Tolkien Fan Get-Together

Tolkien fans can meet to try to reconcile Tom Bombadil's statement that he is "Eldest" with Gandalf's statement that Fangorn is "the oldest of all living things." Or, to discuss the Glorifindel problem.? Additionally, how would the history of Middle-Earth have differed if Sauron had returned to Aman and received the judgement of Manwe at the end o the First Age, rather than remaining in Middle-Earth? Describe resultant cultural differences which would have taken place in the Second, Third, and Fourth Ages. Specail emphasis should be fiven to the cultures of the Grey Havens, Numenor (including the Dunedain and the lack Numenorans), the Rohirrim, the Dunlendings and others descending from the peoples of the White Mountains, the Ents, the peoples of Khand, the Orcs (particularly those tribes living in the Grey, Misty, and Ash Mountains, and the Mountains of Shadow), the Elevn peoples of Gil-Galad (including Elrond and the likelihood of Rivendell's being constructed), the Hobbits (beginning from when they were living in the Vales of Anduin), and the Haradrim (both Near and Far Harad must be covered for full credit.)

Saturday 10:00 p H206

Genre Erotica

Why would you write SF/F/H erotica when you can just write SF/F/H? When you could just write erotica? What things can you do in this cross-genre that you really can't do anywhere else? Doesn't all this genre stuff just get in the way of the main point of the erotica? Give examples. Explore the edges of sexuality..the displacement of desire and repression, sex and power relationships, trans- sexual or transpecies (or simply transcendent?) sex....or just talk about sex, death, and rock and roll.....

Billie Aul (m), Stephen Dedman, Melanie Fletcher, Victoria McManus, Cecilia Tan

Saturday 10:00 p H208

Fall of a Saga

Saturday 10:00 p H209

Pet Shop of Horror [13 +]

Saturday 10:00 p Art Show

Art Show Closes

Saturday 10:00 p Mended Drum

Concert by Bill & Brenda Sutton

Saturday 10:00 p Republic A

3 x 3 Eyes: Legend Of the Divine Demon [Subtitled] [16 +]

Saturday 10:30 p H209

Pet Shop of Horror [13 +]

Saturday 10:30 p Con Suite Foyer

Music

Saturday 11:00 p H209

Pet Shop of Horror [13 +]

Saturday 11:00 p Mended Drum

Concert

Rosemary Kirstein

Saturday 11:00 p Mended Drum

Concert

Rosemary Kirstein

Saturday 11:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Saturday 11:00 p Exeter

Open Filk

Saturday 11:00 p Gardner

Rendezvous

Saturday 11:30 p H209

Pet Shop of Horror [13 +]

Saturday 11:30 p Mended Drum

Concert

Mary Crowell

Saturday 12:00 m

Childcare Closes

Saturday 12:00 m H209

Perfect Blue

Saturday 12:00 m Grand Ballroom

Rocky Horror Picture Show

Live stage performance presented by the Teseracte Players

Sunday

Sunday 0:30 a H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 0:30 a Republic A

Reign: The Conqueror #8 - 13 [Dubbed] [16 +]

Sunday 1:00 a H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 1:00 a Mended Drum

Karaoke

Sunday 1:00 a Mended Drum

Last Call at the Mended Drum

Sunday 1:00 a Gardner

Open Filk

Sunday 1:30 a H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 2:00 a

Hynes Closes

Sunday 2:00 a

Pedestrian Overpass to Marriott Closed

Sunday 2:00 a Grand Ballroom

Shock Treatment

Live stage performance presented by the Teseracte Players of Boston

Sunday 2:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Closes

Sunday 8:00 a

Hynes Open for Setup Only

Sunday 9:00 a

Hynes Opens

Sunday 9:00 a Hall A

Registration Opens

Sunday 9:00 a Hampton

Christian/Catholic Worship Service (Father John Baker)

Sunday 9:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Open

Sunday 9:00 a Republic A

Jungle Emperor Leo [Dubbed] [7 +]

Sunday 9:30 a

Childcare Opens

Sunday 9:30 a H102

Ecumenifilk

Brenda Sutton

Sunday 9:30 a H203

Medieval Fantasy Literature

Sean McMullen

Sunday 9:30 a H205

Con Stress Relief

Stretching exercises to help us make it through another day.

Elizabeth Caldwell

Sunday 9:30 a H301

ASFA Meeting

Sunday 9:30 a Beacon A

Moving to Music [ages 1-7]

Clap and sing to the music of Jim Cosgrove, a Kansas City children's folk singer.

Sunday 9:30 a Beacon F

Leaf Creatures [ages 3-6]

Leaf rubbings and some creativity will turn some ordinary silk leaves into works of art.

Sunday 9:30 a Conference

Filk Office Opens

Sunday 9:30 a Exeter

Reading

Laura Resnick

Sunday 9:30 a Hall A

Shotokan Karate Workshop

Kenn Bates, Keith G. Kato

Sunday 10:00 a

Masquerade Registration Open

Sunday 10:00 a H100

HeroClix

Learn how to use your favorite superheroes to beat any enemy in this hit game from Wizkids.

Sunday 10:00 a H107

More Than Human

A round-table discussion of the 1953 Retro Hugo nominated novel.

Don D'Ammassa

Sunday 10:00 a H203

The Use of Women of Power by DeLint (NW Coastal) and Crowley (Aegypt) Fiction (Janice Bogstad)

Sunday 10:00 a H204

Futurism and Writing SF: a Positive Feedback System

How does writing science fiction and being a futurist blend? Some of our famous authors actively proclaim themselves futurists; others do not. How can futurism help the SF author

Brenda Jean Cooper

Sunday 10:00 a H205

How to Proof Your Own Writing: A Mini-Workshop

Terry McGarry

Sunday 10:00 a H206

My Love Affair With JRR Tolkien

When (and how) did it start? Wasit a passing fling or eternal love? Who or what is sitting at home waiting for you to come to your senses

Daniel Grotta, Karen Haber (m), Kathy Morrow, Michael Swanwick, Connie Willis

Sunday 10:00 a H208

Firefly Marathon, Episode 9-11

Sunday 10:00 a H209

Magic User's Club #1 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 10:00 a H210

WSFS Business Meeting

The WSFS Business Meeting is open to all Worldcon members. The first item of business for today's meeting is to receive the official results of the Worldcon Site Selection. Also at today's meeting is Question Time, where you get a chance to put questions to future seated Worldcon committess. If time permits, the WSFS Mark Protection Committee may meet immediately after the Business Meeting.

Sunday 10:00 a H302

Memorable Scenes

Some stories have scenes which are so right they just stick in your mind. (e.g., The paleontologist being handed a cooler containing a freshly frozen dinosaur head in Swanwick's Bones of the Earth, or Hari Seldon appearing in the Time Vault, "I am Hari Seldon.") What scenes stick in your minds? What makes them so memorable

Grant Carrington, Sharon Lee, Bradford Lyau (m), Darrell Schweitzer

Sunday 10:00 a H303

When did the Future get so far away

Remember the 1959s and 1960s, when by the year 2000 we'd have giant orbiting space stations, routine space travel, and human colonies all over the solar system? Stories written today don't talk of such wonders happening within a few decades -- instead, they're a century or more in the imagined future. What happened? Did we get more cynical and lose our near-term dreams, or more practical and assume the future would be harder to get to that earlier dreamers imagined

Judith Berman, Steve Carper, D. Douglas Fratz, John G. Hemry, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe (m)

Sunday 10:00 a H304

Hiking the Enchanted Forest: Setting in Fantasy

Enchanted forests...Lonely isles...Magic mountains...What is the importance of setting and landscape in fantasy

David B. Coe, Greer Gilman, Beth Hilgartner, Mindy Klasky, Rebecca Moesta (m), Jeff VanderMeer

Sunday 10:00 a H305

Archaeology of the Present

When the dig it all upin the future, what will future generations believe about us based on our tools and possessions

Susan Born, Victoria McManus, Karl Schroeder (m), S. M. Stirling

Sunday 10:00 a H306

Grow Old Along With Me: Aging Your Characters

Why get stuck in adolescence? Middle age is another quest/rite of passage, and so is old age/death. How do you help your characters grow old (gracefully, or not)? How do you work with those parts of the voyage through life in your work? Or, are we being merely mercenary-to sell to an aging market segment?(Or, because we grow old, we grow old...?)

Lois McMaster Bujold, Nancy Kress (m), Jean Lorrah, Steve Miller, John Scalzi, Susan Shwartz

Sunday 10:00 a H307

Visual Research

Once you've gotten your 45 years of National Geographic, what next? Create a good reference library and file, and avoid copyright infringement when using it.

Alan F. Beck, Joe Bergeron, Colleen Doran, Thomas Kidd (m)

Sunday 10:00 a H309

The Art of Titles

Where do titles come from? Are they about art, or more about marketing? Who selects the title - the author or editor/publisher? Can you tell a book's content by its title -- and should you? Are there great books with bad titles, and vice versa? Give examples. What are the ten best titles in SF? -- and Why

Kathryn Cramer (m), Thomas Harlan, Fruma Klass, Terry Pratchett, Gordon Van Gelder

Sunday 10:00 a H310

Too Many Ideas

How much stuff can you stuff in one book? Can there be too many goshwowwhatakenthing ideas, under any circumstances? How can the trade-offs between difficult material and transparency be balanced? Can readers be given more than they can handle? How can the reluctant reader be coaxed along

James Cambias (m), Carl Frederick, Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Sean McMullen

Sunday 10:00 a H311

Star Trek: A Reflection of Cultures

How has each series relfected its time

Bob Greenberger, Les Johnson, Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jim Mann (m)

Sunday 10:00 a H312

The Best Books of 2004 (so far)

You know those hateful people who somehow keep up with their reading? They're all on this panel. They'll share which current works of science fiction, fantasy, horror, and slipstream it's a shame you're missing...

Charles N. Brown, John Clute, Jonathan Strahan (m)

Sunday 10:00 a Art Show

Art Show Opens

Sunday 10:00 a Beacon A

Children's Dance [ages 1-8]

Bring your Teddy Bear. Bring your favorite stuffed animal. Wiggle, jiggle, giggle; hop, bounce, and shake. Dance for kids.

Sunday 10:00 a Beacon D

Sign Language from the Planet ZOOG (7-12)

Aliens might not look like us or sound like us. How would we communicate face to face? Learn some ASL signs that might help you out. (Note: kids should know the English alphabet to participate in this one!)

Geary Gravel

Sunday 10:00 a Beacon F

Pencil Holder [ages 5-10]

Take a paper tubes and cardboard and personalize it for this fun craft.

Sunday 10:00 a Dalton

Weird Tales of Early Aviation

Meet those magnificent men and their flying machines in a selection of wonderfully strange and little-know tales from the early days of flight. Meet the World's Worst Pilot (first survivor of a mid-air collision and four emergency parachute bailouts!), the Pilot Who Flew With A Lion, and more. You'll learn why it once took three months to fly coast-to-coast, and why the 1903 Wright Flyer doesn't really exist, even if you think you've actually seen it. Enjoy these wonderfully strange and little-known tales from the early days of flight!

Michael Dobson

Sunday 10:00 a Exeter

Reading

Laura Underwood

Sunday 10:00 a Gardner

Stories in the Stars (7-12)

Every culture has put its stories into the stars. Come explore the night sky through stories from different cultures, the constellations and the wonders within them.

Steven Hammond

Sunday 10:00 a Hall D

Dealers Opens

Sunday 10:00 a Hampton

Reading

Martha Wells

Sunday 10:00 a Independence

Deryni Adventure

Join Ann Dupuis, publisher of the upcoming Deryni Adventure Game, for a roleplaying adventure involving Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of travelling performers. Katherine Kurtz is co-GM for this adventure.

Sunday 10:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Kage Baker, Barbara Chepaitis, Jo Walton, Michael Whelan

Sunday 10:00 a Liberty C

Transit Fans Discussion Group

Sunday 10:30 a H203

Hackers in Action: Oppositional Agencies, Performance Tropes (Monica Hulsbus)

Sunday 10:30 a H204

E-Books: Neither "E" Nor Books

Cory Doctorow

Sunday 10:30 a H209

Magic User's Club #2 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 10:30 a Clarendon

About Audio Books

Tamora Pierce

Sunday 10:30 a Dalton

How to Get a Job in Games

Clarinda Merripen

Sunday 10:30 a Exeter

Reading

Steve Antczak

Sunday 10:30 a Hampton

Reading

Rosemary Kirstein

Sunday 10:45 a Republic A

Saint Tail #1 - 3 [Dubbed] [N/A]

Sunday 11:00 a H107

Sword and Sorcery: Heroic Fantasy's Punk Kid Brother

Warrior heroes and mighty magicians strutting their stuff across a world of the author's imagination. That can describe both Heroic Fantasy and Sword-and-Sorcery. But why does one sound more up-market than the other? Does it depend on the style of writing -- or just the thickness of the book

Peter Morwood

Sunday 11:00 a H203

Criticism or Review

Is there really a difference? Discuss.

F. Brett Cox, Gregory Feeley (m), Daniel Grotta, Graham Sleight, Takayuki Tatsumi

Sunday 11:00 a H204

Writers' Tools (and Desk Fetishes!)

What do writers keep on their desks? How do these objects help their writing? Professionals show-and-tell what their compositional touchstones are all about, and five hints on how to find your own particular desk fetishes

Michael A. Burstein, Daniel P. Dern, Vera Nazarian, Amy Thomson (m), Shane Tourtellotte

Sunday 11:00 a H205

Low Budget Independent SF Films

Not every SF or fantasy film has to be an effects-laden, multiple hour epic. Three SF movies that go the other way, helped in part by animation software, were featured at the 04 Sundance Film Festival and one of them - Primer - received the grand jury award for best dramatic feature. As one of the filmmakers, Marteinn Thorsson, says, "A science- fiction film doesn't need to be $80 million and use CGI (computer-generated imagery). Science fiction is about human beings interacting with each other and with technology, and technology has become part of who we are today." Is this one shape of things to come in the SF film world

Steve Antczak, Resa Nelson, Don Sakers (m), Charles Stross

Sunday 11:00 a H206

Achilles Needs a Heel! - The Problem With Power

Would Achilles have been interesting if he'd been truly invulnerable, or, instead or dying a tragic here would he still have been acting like a psychopathic adolescent thirty years after the Trojan War ended? Can power without vulnerabilities make an interesting story? (Has anyone succeeded?) What sorts of vulnerabilities are needed? How do you avoid the search for the armor's chink turning a story into a puzzle

Alison Baird (m), Carol Berg, Diane Duane, Sheila Finch

Sunday 11:00 a H209

Magic User's Club #3 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 11:00 a H301

Mixed Marriages

One's a fan, one isn't. How do couples handle the demands of fandom when one of the pair isn't really interested? Panel members have received permission from their spouses to be at this World Con.

Michael Benveniste (m), Bob Devney, Daniel Kimmel, Steven H. Silver

Sunday 11:00 a H302

Personnel Problems of Extraterrestrials in Earth Industry

From Clevention (1955) Proper hygiene for food workers with tentacles? ("Must wash hands, tentacles, pseudopods...")? Safety glasses for the many-eyed? Salary compensation for hive beings? And then there's romance in the workplace...oh, my! And how will the Americans with Disabilities laws apply?

Tobias Buckell, Craig Gardner, Laura Anne Gilman, Steven Popkes, Karen Traviss (m)

Sunday 11:00 a H303

Alien Ethical Systems

What sort of ethical and moral systems would aliens develop, with their very different histories and biologies

Jeffrey A. Carver, Paul Levinson, Elizabeth Moon, Stanley Schmidt (m), Wen Spencer

Sunday 11:00 a H304

Nanotech and Murphy's Law

Imagine nanomachines busily clearing your arteries of plaque. Now, imagine them running on Windows ME, or mutating, or being hacked. So, "nothing can go wrong?" Hah! (And are these some of the reasons it's taking so long to develop the actual science?)

M. M. Buckner, Eileen Gunn (m), Stephen C. Lee, Karl Schroeder, W. A. Thomasson, Ann Tonsor Zeddies

Sunday 11:00 a H305

Getting Around Without a Car

Advantages and disadvantages of different modes of transportation -- from hiking to SCUBA, horses to Mars rovers. Everything is fair game.

Lisa Barnett, Bob Kanefsky, Lee Martindale (m)

Sunday 11:00 a H306

DOA: Books that died despite everything

Well-known author, well-developed plot, thorough marketing plan, yet the book fails to thrive. Why? Did it show too much ambition or too little? Was it old-fashioned, or ahead of its time? Were the stars wrong, or the season, or were we simply coming down with the flu? Let ts count all the sad ways good books go bad...Our panel will discuss the phenomenon from multiple viewpoints.

John Jarrold, Jane Jewell (m), Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Janna Silverstein, Jonathan Strahan, Jacob Weisman

Sunday 11:00 a H307

Drawing to Order

Professional artists tell tales of the perils of work when the call they're responding to is from an art director, and not a muse.

Ed Cox, Joseph DeVito (m), Karen Haber, Don Maitz, Omar Rayyan

Sunday 11:00 a H309

The Art of Janny Wurts

Slide show

Janny Wurts

Sunday 11:00 a H310

The Age of Fighting Sail Isn't Over: It's Moved to SF

Shiver me titanium timber if this wet navy/space navy transposition hasn't gotten even more popular than ever! Who are its leading practitioners - have we got another Patrick O'Brian yet? Can this metaphor survive real space travel? And talking about "sailing through space," take a quick look at how nautical fiction is related to to space opera and hard SF...look at characters and commanders, story lines, missions, venues, dangers, and bureaucracy! Shivermetimbers, if "Sou' by West by Port o' West and Weather the Lizard" doesn't sound nearly as romantic in GPS-ese...

John G. Hemry, Jim Mann (m), Susan Shwartz, Walter Jon Williams

Sunday 11:00 a H311

Exotic Mythologies

Tired of fantasy larded with cardboard cut-outs from Celtic mythology? Explore some of the world's great mythologies that fantasy has yet to fully explore. A survey of great ideas from countries and peoples around the world.

Suzanne Alles Blom, Anne Harris, Josepha Sherman (m), Vandana Singh

Sunday 11:00 a H312

The Secularization of the West

Religion as a force shaping Western civilization appears to be declining. Is this a long-term trend or just a temportary blip? If religion really is on the way out, what will replace it as a source of shared values for our culture? How will this affect the rest of the world? Will religious fundamentalism drive the next global conflict? (Is this happening already?)

Elizabeth Hand, Daniel Hatch, James Macdonald (m), James Morrow

Sunday 11:00 a Art Show

Tour of the Retro Art Exhibit

Bob Eggleton

Sunday 11:00 a Autographing

Autographing

Brian W. Aldiss, Kevin J. Anderson, Walter H. Hunt, Robert I. Katz, William Tenn, Rebecca Moesta, Uncle River, Robert J. Sawyer

Sunday 11:00 a Beacon A

Kinderfilk (1-6)

Mark Mandel

Sunday 11:00 a Beacon D

Science and Technology for the Kids of the Future (7-12)

Did you know that many adults remember the first color TV's and microwaves" That we lived in a world where our parents and friends could never be reached by cell-phone or email when we were kids? In this program, we'll explore what technologies you might see in the future!

Brenda Jean Cooper

Sunday 11:00 a Beacon F

Wizard/Princess Hat [ages 2-6]

Cut out and decorate a cone shaped hat to pretend with or to start your design of a new costume idea.

Sunday 11:00 a Clarendon

Exomusicology

Would we truly be able to recognize "alien" music as such...and how (when?) has the question of alien/non-music actually come up on Earth itself

W. Randy Hoffman, David R. Howell, Louise Marley (m), Yves Meynard

Sunday 11:00 a Dalton

Saving Clarion East

A brainstorming session open to alumni and potential attendees. It will lay out the problems and try to redesign the workshop for long-term survival.

James Patrick Kelly

Sunday 11:00 a Exeter

Reading (1 hour)

Nick Sagan

Sunday 11:00 a Gardner

Staying Safe on the Net (7-12)

Let's go surfing now, everybody's learning how, follow all the links with me! The Net can be a wild ride, let's learn how to enjoy it while keeping private things private.

James M. Turner

Sunday 11:00 a Hall A

Music

Sunday 11:00 a Hampton

Reading

Michael F. Flynn

Sunday 11:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Roger MacBride Allen, Phyllis Eisenstein, Esther Friesner, George R. R. Martin

Sunday 11:00 a Liberty A

Everquest Addicts (Muriel Hykes)

Sunday 11:30 a H100

HeroClix Tournament

Bring your favorite superhero characters and test them in this Wizkids sanctioned event. [500 pts. Female characters only]

Sunday 11:30 a H209

Magic User's Club #4 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 11:30 a Dalton

Intimate Adventure: Exploring a New Genre

Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jean Lorrah

Sunday 11:30 a Hampton

Reading

Jack L. Chalker

Sunday 12:00 n

Masquerade Registration Closes

Sunday 12:00 n H100

Toon RPG: King of the Con tournament

Games featured are: Fluxx, The Haunting House, Nuclear War, NinjaBurger Card Game, and Gimme the Brain. You must sign up for this event. You must be in the room by Noon to play. {Experienced players]

Sunday 12:00 n H100

Monkeys on the Moon

Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from Eight Foot Llama? (2 - 4 players per game.)

Sunday 12:00 n H102

The Well Sung Fan

Filking was invented (or was that discovered?) over 50 years ago, with song cycles that go back to the 1940s. In fact, our FGOH Jack Speer wrote the first song sheet. What are the songs of the last 50 years that all fans should know? (Some musical accompaniment should be attempted here!)

Juanita Coulson, Bill Roper (m)

Sunday 12:00 n H107

Forthcoming from Baen

The Infamous Travelling Slide Show (with Door Prizes!)

Toni Weisskopf

Sunday 12:00 n H203

Science in SF

Video.

Catherine Asaro

Sunday 12:00 n H204

Promoting a First Novel

OK, you may not get the biggest push from your publisher's marketiing myrmidon. Nevertheless, are there practical steps you can take? Suggesting possible blurbers? Getting local reviewers? Bribing your way onto Worldcon program

Keith R. A. DeCandido, Laura Anne Gilman

Sunday 12:00 n H205

Dialogue

Barry N. Malzberg, Mike Resnick

Sunday 12:00 n H206

Psychiatric Disorders of the Future

Psychologists seem to be inventing new disorders all the time to justify behavior considered in some way "aberrant" -- and defense lawyers hasten to jump on the bandowagon to get their clients off the hook. (Remember the "Twinkie Defense" in which a client was supposedly incapable of rational action after devouring too much junk food?) On the flip side, some old conditions (e.g., homosexuality) are no longer considered psychiatric disorders. Are psychologists gaining better insights into the human psyche, or just getting better insight into the potential market for their services? What has SF contributed to psychological insight? What sort of disorders will be discovered or emerge over the next 50 years

Michael Rennie, Uncle River, Isaac Szpindel (m), Shane Tourtellotte, Trish Wilson

Sunday 12:00 n H209

Magic User's Club #5 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 12:00 n H301

America's Best Comics

The line that Alan Moore begat has spun a number of imaginative and wildly different SF and fantasy titles, including *Tom Strong*, *Promethea* and *Top Ten*. What makes these books work so well? Is it true that Promethea's readers are 98% male? And why aren't there more stories featuring that scary kid genius, Jack B. Quick

James Bacon, Terence Chua (m), Daniel P. Dern, Pam Fremon, Barry Short

Sunday 12:00 n H302

The New Weird: What, Who, and Why

Now that SF has become more mainstream, what has become the new fringe? Who defines what is "weird," and who and what have been declared "weird," -- and why

Paul DiFilippo, Beth Meacham, Delia Sherman, Graham Sleight (m), Jonathan Strahan, Jeff VanderMeer

Sunday 12:00 n H303

The Legacy of Cherry Wilder

Jim Frenkel, Katya Reimann

Sunday 12:00 n H304

Hell is Gray: The Banality of Evil

Back, deep in the mists of history, there has always been a sneaking suspicion that evil is more exciting, more fun than good: many writers (from Milton on down!) make evil seem interesting. (Why?)But is it fun? The (fortunately) few times most of us get near a truly bad person, they don't seem to be very joyful or happy - they seen terribly unhappy and frequently pretty dull. C. S. Lewis called this the banality of evil: uncreative, repetitious, and boring. Hell is not fiery-red, it is gray. Who has done a good job, in fantasy or SF, showing realistic heroes combating realistic evil

Barbara Chepaitis, Stephen Dedman, Paula Guran, Elizabeth Hand (m), Tanya Huff, Mary Turzillo

Sunday 12:00 n H305

There's No Tech Like Lo-Tech

Resist the peer pressure from PDA-wielding, cell-phone- carrying, GPS-enabled friends and family. Pick up a hammer, and not a power tool! Rhapsodize about the wonders of steam engines, and things with gears. What's the attraction of the low-tech lifestyle

Sean McMullen, S. M. Stirling, Robert Charles Wilson, William "Crash" Yerazunis (m)

Sunday 12:00 n H306

Better than Light Sabers: Really Good Merchandising Tie-Ins

Hey - wouldn't you pay good money for a real Vinge bubble? And what else are we ignoring...

Mike Conrad, Leigh Grossman, David R. Howell, Karen Traviss (m), Liz Williams

Sunday 12:00 n H307

Angels and Aliens, Magic and Marvels

Is there an inherent disconnect between believing in a Divine presence and being able to really enjoy science fction and fantasy? Or, can they complement each other, leading to a greater appreciation of both

Anne Harris, Beth Hilgartner, Ben Jeapes, James Morrow (m), Brandon Sanderson

Sunday 12:00 n H309

The (Digital) Art of Joe Bergeron

Slide show and demo

Joe Bergeron

Sunday 12:00 n H310

Present at the Creation

A First Fandom panel, looking at our origins.

David A. Kyle, Frederik Pohl, Jack Speer (m)

Sunday 12:00 n H311

Silver and Gold: The Ages of SF

What defines the "Golden" age of SF? The "Silver"? When did they come about? How did they evolve? What are their differences? What influences of these "ages" have been carried into present day SF

Brian W. Aldiss, Grant Carrington, Don D'Ammassa, David G. Hartwell, Allen Steele (m)

Sunday 12:00 n H312

Reading (1 hour)

Terry Pratchett

Sunday 12:00 n Art Show

Art Show Tour

Margaret Organ-Kean

Sunday 12:00 n Art Show

Ellen James, harpist

April Grant, Edward James

Sunday 12:00 n Autographing

Autographing

Jack Dann, P. C. Hodgell, Mindy Klasky, Sharon Lee, David B. Mattingly, Steve Miller, Robert Sheckley, Charles Stross

Sunday 12:00 n Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Sunday 12:00 n Beacon D

Joke Workshop (7-12)

John Zakour

Sunday 12:00 n Beacon F

CD Ring Planet [ages 4-8]

Create a planet to hang at home out of styrofoam balls, a CD and your creative imagination.

Sunday 12:00 n Con Suite Foyer

April Grant, fiddler

April Grant, Edward James

Sunday 12:00 n Dalton

Tarot Spreads: Mapping Destiny

Are you familiar with the meanings of individual tarot cards, but can't seem to read them in a spread? Is the Celtic Cross driving you nuts? Hey, there are a lot of ways to map destiny. Come join us - we'll discuss different spreads, how to read them, even how to create them. Bring notebooks and a pen.

Janine Ellen Young

Sunday 12:00 n Exeter

Reading

Jay Caselberg

Sunday 12:00 n Gardner

The Kids Next Door...in Space!

Building a Space Station!

Bill Higgins, Jordin T. Kare

Sunday 12:00 n Hampton

Reading

Paul Witcover

Sunday 12:00 n Independence

What The World Needs Now

Cupid takes a holiday! And you're filling in for him! You and your fellow Toons have to bring love into the hearts of a few people this Valentine's Day; thankfully, you're not expected to cover the world. Just the Anytown Mall. Here's your wings, bow, and arrows -- now get out there and spread some romance! [6 players, Characters created at game]

Sunday 12:00 n ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Simon R. Green, Charlaine Harris, David Levine, Tamora Pierce

Sunday 12:00 n Liberty C

FLY Ladies Discussion Group (Eva Whitley)

Sunday 12:00 n Republic A

Last Exile #1 - 4 [Dubbed] [13 +]

Sunday 12:30 p H204

"Big Planet" as Bosnia

A reinterpretation of the Vance novel.

Peter Weston

Sunday 12:30 p H209

Magic User's Club #6 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 12:30 p H210

The Microphone Is Your Friend

Sunday 12:30 p H303

Have Spacesuit...

Get up close and personal with an authentic Apollo 7 prototype spacesuit and meet the real-life "Kip Russell" who owns it. (no, he didn't win it in a soap jingle contest). Learn the secrets of spacesuit construction, and even get your picture taken with it. You can even touch it, if you're nice and your hands are clean...

Michael Dobson

Sunday 12:30 p Exeter

Reading

M. M. Buckner

Sunday 12:30 p Hampton

Reading

Esther Friesner

Sunday 1:00 p H100

Who Stole Ed's Pants

Frame your opponents for pants theft in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice. (3-4 players per game)

Sunday 1:00 p H203

Can SF Teach the Scientific Method

Can you actually teach logic and methodology in the classroom? Should you? Can SF help? Is Spock a good role model

Mike Brotherton, Carl Frederick (m), David Friedman, Charles Oberndorf, Isaac Szpindel, Mary Turzillo

Sunday 1:00 p H204

Turning Children's Books Into Film

Putting the Harry Potter books on film is turning out pretty well. Besides "Holes," the latest "Peter Pan," the recent TV "Wrinkle in Time," (plus Peter Jackson's promised The Hobbit) what other kids' stuff would look great on the silver screen? Why? And perhaps most importantly, how

Kathryn Cramer, Susan Fichtelberg, Diana Tixier Herald, James S. Hinsey (m), Kathleen Kudlinski, Bonnie Kunzel

Sunday 1:00 p H205

Risky Business

Risk acceptance vs. risk aversion in humans, and how it might affect things like evolution, scientific investigation, and (especially) exploration/manned space flight.

Marc Giller, Bill Higgins, Geoffrey A. Landis, Mark L. Olson (m), H. Paul Shuch

Sunday 1:00 p H206

The Human Cloning Wars

Success with cloning mammals makes it look as if human cloning may be possible. The first steps toward human cloning have been reported. The battle lines are already drawn on how far to go. Opinions range from the Raelians who say everybody must get cloned, to religious conservatives who want cloning banned. But the real debate is about the perils and promises of reproductive and therapeutic cloning. What's the difference? How does it matter to us? What's likely to change? Will cloning lead to human organ farms for spare parts? What are some of the emerging ethical concerns about this biotechnology? How can they be addressed

Daniel Abraham (m), Bridget Coila, Herb Kauderer, Mary H. Rosenblum, Samuel Scheiner

Sunday 1:00 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #1 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 1:00 p H210

Filk Pickup Concert

Sunday 1:00 p H301

More About Merlin

Merlin had his own existence in legend before his association with Arthur; he was a wilder pagan figure. Look at the independent treatments of Merlin, and those who followed after in his image.

Christopher Cevasco (m), Stephen Leigh, Josepha Sherman, Sarah Zettel

Sunday 1:00 p H302

Stories I'm too Scared to Write

What makes some topics too frightening to write about? Is one person's bane another's delight

Ginjer Buchanan (m), Joe Haldeman, Louise Marley, Robert Charles Wilson

Sunday 1:00 p H303

Just Because We Speak the Same Language Doesn't Mean We Think Alike

Are we divided by a common tongue? Which cultural factors unite the English-speaking world - and which divide it? How can we overcome those differences? (Should we try?) How does this appear in the real world and in the fannish word (especially!)? Who's "right" - who's "wrong" - and how can we cope with these differences

jan howard finder, Jay Caselberg, Grant Kruger (m), Michael Rennie, Karen Traviss

Sunday 1:00 p H304

Starship Firefighters: Emergency Response in SF

When your dad was in the fire department, he hooked up to a hydrant, dragged the hose into the building, pointed it at the fire and squirted. Nowadays,(a very few, very well funded) Fire Departments are using GPS, integrated helmet arrays that combine air supply monitoring and communications, Incident Command Systems, Personal Alert Safety Systems, thermal imaging, robots for bomb work, hazmat recon, realtime wireless video, etc.,etc.,etc. Emergency response folk battle hurricanes, forest fires with technology and science driven systems. And now your friendly neighborhood firefighter, paramedic and beat cop are likely to be the first to deal with such things as Bio, Chem, Rad or Nuke attacks and they'll have to deal with them for quite some time before the Feds gear up their 'fast' response. This is a definite culture change driven by technology -- Is there anyone out there in SF doing something with this? If so, who? If not, why? If it can be done, how should it be done? And what happens when things go wrong in space

Robert Buettner, Chris French, John G. Hemry, Steven L. Lopata, James Macdonald (m), Henry Spencer

Sunday 1:00 p H305

Writers' Blocks

All about Writer's Block: writer's block is a simple concept, that the writer is stuck. Getting past it, though, can be less simple--there are lots of different possible causes--stress at work or at home, a story that the plot is getting stuck on, characters that the writer is getting bored with, etc. The ways to address writers' block differ, too. Some people take a long walk, some garden, some go shopping, some go on-line, some work on a different story, some read a favorite book. There's no one cure -- but different writers have different strategies, or sets of strategies, and those can work for other people, too. Working through Blockages: What techniques can writers use when they hit problems with the plot, the setting, and the characters? How can a writer persuade a character to "tell" them what's bothering the character, or why the character won't cross that river the writer thinks the character needs to cross? What does a writer do after having gathered the armies to have a war, and the characters are so unobliging as to refuse to fight? How do writers write themselves out of boxes? And what other things can a writer do when stuck, besides cat vacuuming

K. A. Bedford, Patricia Bray (m), Tobias Buckell, Stephen P. Kelner

Sunday 1:00 p H306

Confronting Your Characters

A participant will take on the role of an author's main character, and complain to the writer how badly the writer has treated him/her. The writer gets to respond...

Hilari L. Bell (m), Carol Berg, Lois McMaster Bujold, Steve Miller, Elizabeth Moon

Sunday 1:00 p H307

Character Portraits: Painting Someone You've Never Seen

No author ever describes a character so specifically as an artist does in a portrait - so how does an artist construct such a portrait with only the author's words to go on? How do you fill in the gaps

Rick Berry, David B. Mattingly, Margaret Organ-Kean (m), Ruth Sanderson

Sunday 1:00 p H309

KONG and the Art of Joe DeVito

Slide show

Joseph DeVito

Sunday 1:00 p H310

Experience Science Fiction: The Museum

The new Science Fiction Museum and hall of Fame (SFM) opened its doors in June. This world-class interactive museum features creators of both science fiction literature and media, providing an overview of the history of scence fiction and its impact on society, culture, and imagination. Is this the new Alexandria for the science fiction community? Find out how you can get more involve with the museum, and learn more about its plans for the near future.

Gregory Benford, Gay Haldeman, Leslie Howle (m), Michael Whelan

Sunday 1:00 p H311

Fun and Games with Time Travel

OK, assume time travel is possible...now, what do you do with it? What are some of the tricks you can play, and what are some of the issues (plot problems, paradoxes, etc.) that you might meet? Play!

Kage Baker, Ben Jeapes, S. M. Stirling, Michael Swanwick, Connie Willis (m)

Sunday 1:00 p H312

Beyond Sex

Writing sex scenes is easy, but conveying the ebbs and flows of a meaningful romantic relationship is harder to do. How do authors do this successfully

David B. Coe (m), George R. R. Martin, Victoria McManus, Laura Resnick, Melinda Snodgrass

Sunday 1:00 p Art Show

Art Show Tour

John F. Hertz

Sunday 1:00 p Autographing

Autographing

John Clute, Neil Gaiman, David A. Hardy, Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jean Lorrah, Harry Turtledove, Rick Wilber

Sunday 1:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Michael F. Flynn, Justine Larbalestier, G. David Nordley, Scott Westerfeld

Sunday 1:00 p Beacon A

Playground Games [ages 4-7]

Play basic rule games in a more organized manner than open playtime (Duck, Duck, Goose; Animal Tag; Simon Says, etc)

Sunday 1:00 p Beacon D

Origami for Kids (7-12)

Create shapes and animals using Japanese folded paper techniques. Learn the basic folds and see what you can create.

Mark R. Leeper

Sunday 1:00 p Beacon F

Alien Catcher [ages 3-8]

Using a toilet paper tube, fun foam and your imagination make a fun game to capture a created alien.

Sunday 1:00 p Clarendon

Voice Workshop

Learn how to sing with good intonation and projection. Perfect your breathing. Avoid straining your voice. Review of introduction, everyone can improve their technique.

Mary C. Miller

Sunday 1:00 p Dalton

The Wizard of Oz: a Dialog

W. Randy Hoffman, Toni L. P. Kelner

Sunday 1:00 p Exeter

Reading

Shariann Lewitt

Sunday 1:00 p Gardner

Improvisational Acting (7-12)

Acting out, with other future actors.

Michael McAfee

Sunday 1:00 p Hampton

Reading (1 hour)

Mike Resnick

Sunday 1:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Mitchell Freedman, Nancy Kress, Sharon Lee, Lawrence Watt-Evans

Sunday 1:30 p H100

Icehouse Demo

Try many unique games like Martian Chess!

Sunday 1:30 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War #2 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 1:30 p H210

Filk Request/One-Shots Concert

Sunday 1:30 p Dalton

About Collaborations

Steven Sawicki

Sunday 1:30 p Exeter

Reading

Ann Tonsor Zeddies

Sunday 1:30 p ConSuite

Long Live the Legion!

The Worldcon tribute to...the Legion of Superheroes...

Joe Bergeron, Priscilla Olson (m), Don Sakers, Jed Shumsky

Sunday 1:45 p Republic A

Escaflowne, The Movie [Subtitled]

Sunday 2:00 p H100

Icehouse Tournament

Sunday 2:00 p H100

Monkeys on the Moon

Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from Eight Foot Llama? (2 - 4 players per game.)

Sunday 2:00 p H107

Bantam/Spectra

Sunday 2:00 p H203

The Idea of Colony in Science Fiction

Stephen Dedman

Sunday 2:00 p H204

The Gaijin Menace - the Foreigner in Anime/Manga

How are American, Chinese, or Europeans seen in Japanese media? How are different ethnicities portrayed in anime and manga

James S. Hinsey (m), Mari Kotani, Neil Nadelman, Wen Spencer, Bill Todd

Sunday 2:00 p H205

TAFF/DUFF Auction

Valuable and/or fascinating books, fanzines, toys, artwork, and "tuckerizations" (wherein your favorite writers vow to include your name in their next works) are sold to the highest bidder! Buy early and often to benefit the Trans- Atlantic Fan Fund and Down Under Fan Fund. Auctioneers: Guy and Rosie Lillian (past Duff delegates) and Peter Weston (Fan Guest of Honor).

Sunday 2:00 p H206

To Mars

In January President Bush announced plans to send astronauts back to the moon and on to Mars. NASA is figuring out how to do it/ Is it really the space advocate's dream come true? Will the program sink under projected cost, or would we better off just sending robots

Gregory Benford, Jeff Hecht (m), Les Johnson, Geoffrey A. Landis, Ian Randal Strock

Sunday 2:00 p H208

Finding the Future: A Science Fiction Conversation: Introduced by Casey Moore

Sunday 2:00 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #3 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 2:00 p H210

Space Opera by the North Cambridge Family Opera Company

Sunday 2:00 p H301

A David Hardy Interview

Learn more about this popular British artist, as he talks about his career and experiences in fandom.

Paul Barnett, David A. Hardy, Pamela Scoville

Sunday 2:00 p H302

The Writer and Moral Responsibility

So, you write a book about a serial-killer-vampire, and find out that a disturbed 14-year-old kid has decided to play out that fantasy...Arrgh!!!? Talk about this, and related issues. Where does the buck stop

Carol Berg, Chris Moriarty, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Deborah Ross, Brandon Sanderson (m)

Sunday 2:00 p H303

Losing the History of SF

Most contemporary readers lack a consciousness of the history of the field. How is this abetted by mainstream publishers

John R. Douglas

Sunday 2:00 p H304

The Tropes of H.P. Lovecraft

H.P. Lovecraft pioneered a number of now-common themes and settings for horror. Elder gods; mad old magic books; decayed house, towns, cities, civilizations, or charachters; and of course slimy, shadowed, unspeakably betentacled forms of an eldritch horror beyond the most lurid imaginings of man... What other concepts just scream Lovecraft, and why are they all such fun? How has Lovecraft continued to influence the genre

Christopher Cevasco, Jack L. Chalker, Terence Chua, Darrell Schweitzer (m), Jim Young

Sunday 2:00 p H305

The Risks of Recruitment

"Everyone says" we have to bring in new blood to fandom. What are the dangers? How do we tie these newbies into the existing fannish community, and keep its identify and stability - and is that something that should make us think again about the new blood

Priscilla Olson (m), Andrew Porter, Tom Schaad, Kevin Standlee

Sunday 2:00 p H306

Art Auction

You've already bid. Now see if you've won. (Of course, after the winning comes the paying...)

Sunday 2:00 p H307

All Things to All Fen

From the 1963 Worldcon... What does it mean to be a fan? In 1963, the conclusion was that fanzines were the single most important feature of fandom. That's changed. But - how do the different groups making up the community feel they fit? Is there any sense of unity? What does fandom offer you

Denise Gendron, Bey King, Gary D. McGath, Kevin P. Roche, Edie Stern (m)

Sunday 2:00 p H309

The Art of Don Maitz

Slide show

Don Maitz

Sunday 2:00 p H310

Heinlein's Juveniles

Heinlein's juveniles are still being read and reread by SF fans nearly a half-century after they were first published. They have rarely (if ever) gone out of print. Why are these "kiddie books" so popular? Join in, and discuss your favorite Heinlein juveniles, why you love them, and why they've stood the test of time far better than a lot of the other SF from their era

Solomon Davidoff, Bradford Lyau (m), Joseph T. Major, John McDaid, Tamora Pierce

Sunday 2:00 p H311

Mercenaries in SF - The Eclipse of the Citizen Soldier

From the Dendari, onward, how have they been handled in the genre? Additionally, *why* is the idea of a vigilante superhero so prevalent in American culture, anyway

John G. Hemry, Sean M. Mead, Elizabeth Moon (m), Mike Shepherd-Moscoe

Sunday 2:00 p H312

Fantasy Noire

Fantasy doesn't have to be sweetness and light, it can be dark without turning into gore-ridden horror. Who is writing dark fantasy today" Are there several traditions, or does it all derive from Lovecraft? Are there motifs in dark fantasy as pervasive as the Quest is in high fantasy? Has dark fantasy gotten cliche-d

Jim Butcher, Glen Cook, Faye Ringel (m), Delia Sherman

Sunday 2:00 p Art Show

Close of Written Bidding in Art Show

Sunday 2:00 p Art Show

Art Show Closing

Featuring a fanfare and exit music by The Star Chamber

Sunday 2:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Hilari L. Bell, Sheila Finch, John M. Ford, Mitchell Freedman, Harry Harrison, Ellen Kushner, Connie Willis

Sunday 2:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Jim Frenkel, Elizabeth Hand, Gary K. Wolf

Sunday 2:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Sunday 2:00 p Beacon D

What's in a Name? - Writing and Art for Kids (7-12)

How do names relate to the stories being told about them? Or do the names tell the story

Ruth Sanderson

Sunday 2:00 p Beacon F

Origami with Mark Leeper [ages 3-8]

Join Mark to create animals from folded paper.

Sunday 2:00 p Clarendon

Ukulele Workshop

Blind Lemming Chiffon

Sunday 2:00 p Dalton

What Fans Demand of the Writer

We're not really just talking autographs and panel patter here. Do we press authors for authentic characterization, unsettled originality, and true mind expansion? Or just insist on nicely riveted research and more of the same old same old

Charlaine Harris

Sunday 2:00 p Exeter

Reading

Kage Baker

Sunday 2:00 p Gardner

Blowing Bubbles (7-12)

Bob Kanefsky

Sunday 2:00 p Grand Ballroom

PRIMEr

Winner, Sundance Film Festival

Sunday 2:00 p Hall A

Junkyard Wars

William "Crash" Yerazunis

Sunday 2:00 p Hampton

Reading

Michael Swanwick

Sunday 2:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Charles N. Brown, Katherine Kurtz, Vera Nazarian, Janny Wurts

Sunday 2:00 p Liberty A

Girl Scouts (Suli Isaacs)

Sunday 2:30 p H203

SF in the Tabloids

Circulations for the SF magazines have been dropping for years. But the tabloids sell hundreds of thousands of copies per week -- and they carry a lot of material that can only be described as SF! Are we doing something wrong

Thomas A. Easton

Sunday 2:30 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #4 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 2:30 p H303

Effects of Different Gravity

...on atmospheres, structures, and people..

G. David Nordley

Sunday 2:30 p Dalton

Great Illustrators of the Past, and How to Collect Them

Jerry Weist

Sunday 2:30 p Exeter

Reading

Beth Hilgartner

Sunday 2:30 p Hampton

Reading

James Patrick Kelly

Sunday 3:00 p H100

Who Stole Ed's Pants

Frame your opponents for pants theft in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice. (3-4 players per game)

Sunday 3:00 p H203

Twentieth-Century Utopian SF: Huxley and Orwell and Wells and...

Charlie Petit

Sunday 3:00 p H204

LOTR: Looking Back at the Films

The film series is over, the dust has settled, was it all worth it? A look back, and assessment of the series as a whole.

MaryAnn Johanson, Laurie Mann (m), Kathy Morrow

Sunday 3:00 p H205

The Senile Pen

Is it true that older authors lose focus (or, merely that they lose their editors)? Great ideas - but cardboard characters? Might this be a function of age? Or fame? Or what

John R. Douglas (m), Laura Anne Gilman, Jim Grimsley, Shawna McCarthy

Sunday 3:00 p H206

Fandom's Bad Ideas: Remembering the Best of the Worst

The Cosmic Circle? Coventry? Slan shacks? What are some of the worst ideas (besides Worldcon, Inc.?) with which fandom has dabbled? Should the Tucker Hotel actually include a beer can tower to the moon? Panelists reveal the secrets behind the best of the worst (after all, we're all fen here)

Jack L. Chalker, Joe Siclari (m), Jack Speer

Sunday 3:00 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #5 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 3:00 p H210

Filk Concert 20

Sunday 3:00 p H301

The Fermi Paradox: Where is Everyone

Enrico Fermi asked the question "Where are they?" Everything we know about astronomy, physics, chemistry and biology seems to say that planets with life ought to be common in the universe. If so, where are the aliens? Something is wrong - but what

John G. Cramer, G. David Nordley, Mark L. Olson (m), Stanley Schmidt

Sunday 3:00 p H302

Creating Gods

Gods are important characters in fantasy works from mythology to the Silmarillion to Saberhagen's "Swords" novels to Discworld. How does one introduce superbeings into a work without pushing the human characters into insignificance? Gods are often gigantic projections of human characteristics. Can they serve other functions as well? Additionally, why are polytheistic settings so common in fantasy? What are the sources that authors are using, and why? And why do readers find them so compelling

Lois McMaster Bujold (m), David B. Coe, Glen Cook, George R. R. Martin, Tamora Pierce, Jo Walton

Sunday 3:00 p H303

The Feng-shui of Program

Experts tell all. How do you properly balance a convention program? Is it all about ideasāprogram participants"or do you really have to move all that furniture around? And,are there really any completely BAD program ideas (and why?) - and should you try risky things on Somebody Else's Program before messing up your own convention? How can one overthrow the bourgeois hegemony of panel discussions -- and is it really worth it to try

Jim Mann, Priscilla Olson (m), John Pomeranz

Sunday 3:00 p H304

The Catharsis of Myth, The Shock of Invention

(Readercon) In writing or reading fiction, we place a high value on the degree to which the plot unfolds in unexpected ways. But much of the power of myth and fairy tales derives from the way they fulfill our expectations. How do the best works of fantasy reconcile these seeming opposites

Ellen Datlow, Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Daniel Hatch, Elizabeth Anne Hull (m)

Sunday 3:00 p H305

Growing Artistically Through Crisis

Your spouse left you, your dog died, and the bank repossessed your pickup. If you're not a country western singer, what do you do

James S. Hinsey (m), Laurie J. Marks, Deborah Ross, Amy Thomson

Sunday 3:00 p H306

Lonely Planet: The Extinction of Everybody But Us

It's estimated that the familiar banana (a monoclonal variety known as the cavendish) will disappear from global shelves within a decade. One SF writer/marine biologist (Peter Watts) says he hopes his successors like squids and jellyfish, because in 50 years they'll be the only marine life left. Are we about to experience big bad changes in our biosphere, or are we alarmed over nothing? An exploration of many questions exploring the deficits or dividends of genetic diversity (past, present, and future!)

M. M. Buckner, D. Douglas Fratz (m), Samuel Scheiner, Pat York

Sunday 3:00 p H307

Gaming to Book Crossover - and Back Again

Getting information from the game or book...or giving it to the game or book: is this a chicken-egg issue? Find out where the game stops (starts) and the book begins (ends?)...

Thomas Harlan

Sunday 3:00 p H309

The Art of Jael

Slide show

Jael

Sunday 3:00 p H310

Defending the Writing Life

Or. "You're not busy, are you?" What to say when your parent, neighbor, or the mom besides you at playgroup asks, "So, are you still doing that writing stuff?" Why do writers have to defend their occupation to others? Why do our relatives and neighbors all think that because we're home we aren't really working? What great responses can you give them

Jack Dann, Melanie Fletcher (m), Gavin Grant, Gay Haldeman, David Marusek

Sunday 3:00 p H311

My Favorite Novels

Panelists will supply a list of their favorite novels, and the audience will try to match the authors to their lists. Then, they'll discuss their choices.

Rosemary Kirstein, Paul Levinson (m), Robert Reed, Robert Charles Wilson

Sunday 3:00 p H312

The Far Future: Where Fantasy Meets SF

As Clarke's Law says, any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. When writing about the far future, where do we draw this distinction? Can we? And, perhaps more importantly, should we

Jeffrey A. Carver, Brenda Jean Cooper (m), Karl Schroeder, Robert Silverberg

Sunday 3:00 p Art Show

Tour of the Retro Art Exhibit

Robert K. Wiener

Sunday 3:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Juanita Coulson, Nancy Kress, Barry N. Malzberg, James Morrow, Terry Pratchett, Mike Resnick, Lawrence Schoen

Sunday 3:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Kelly Link, S. M. Stirling, Charles Stross

Sunday 3:00 p Mended Drum

Concert

Blind Lemming Chiffon

Sunday 3:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Sunday 3:00 p Beacon D

Pictionary (7-12)

Teddy Harvia

Sunday 3:00 p Beacon F

Write a Story [ages 4-7]

Everyone has a story running around inside them. Here's the time to bring it out.

Sunday 3:00 p Clarendon

Bodran Workshop

The elegant underlay of a skilled percussionist is a welcome decoration to music. An introduction to the bodran (Irish frame drum) with a master percussionist.

Brenda Sutton

Sunday 3:00 p Con Suite Foyer

Ellen James, harpist

Edward James

Sunday 3:00 p Dalton

Making a Poly-shrink Pin

Instant jewelry making - for adults!

Elizabeth Janes

Sunday 3:00 p Exeter

Reading

Michelle Sagara West

Sunday 3:00 p Gardner

Live Action Roleplaying Game: Harry Potter and the Lost Labyrinth (7-12)

Albertus Dumbledore is ready to welcome the new first year students into the Hogwarts school of magic! But he seems to be acting strangely lately. He forgets a lot of things, today he even forgot where the great hall was! Has something happened to his memory? In the meantime, the new students are starting their classes: Potions with Snape, Care of Magical Creatures with Hagrid, and there is a new Dark Arts professor: a mysterious woman who always wears a veil that covers her faceā It is said that a student caught a glimpse of her face, but was sent to the infirmary soon after! Finally, there is a door in Hogwarts with warning signs on it, and the teachers aren't allowing anyone through! Students who have sneaked a peek say that there is a labyrinth beyond the door! A magical hedge maze with shifting passages. What could be at its center? [20 players, 7 - 12 years old]

Sunday 3:00 p Hampton

Reading

Barbara Chepaitis, Steven Sawicki

Sunday 3:00 p Independence

Deryni Guide

An old friend sent a cryptic message. Might he have found a fabled treatise on Deryni magic? Where is he? And who else might be looking for the book, and the power it represents? A Deryni adventure featuring Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of travelling performers.

Sunday 3:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Paula Guran, Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Michael Swanwick, Teresa Nielsen Hayden, Harry Turtledove

Sunday 3:00 p Liberty C

Boy Scouts (Fred Isaacs)

Sunday 3:10 p Republic A

Mad Ox 1 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 3:30 p H203

Horror and the American Literary Mainstream

Poe wrote it; Hawthorne wrote it; Henry James wrote it...why do our literary heavy hitters keep coming back to things that go bump in the night

Debra Doyle

Sunday 3:30 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #6 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 3:30 p H210

"Electro" Concert

Gary Ehrlich

Sunday 3:30 p H307

Adapting Media Tie-ins to Computer Games

Kimberly Ann Kindya

Sunday 3:30 p Exeter

Reading

Michael A. Burstein

Sunday 3:30 p Hampton

Reading

Catherine Asaro

Sunday 4:00 p H100

Monkeys on the Moon

Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from Eight Foot Llama? (2 - 4 players per game.)

Sunday 4:00 p H107

What's New from Tor

A presentation of recent and forthcoming works published by Tor Books, along with a brief Q&A about the books. Come see the pretty pictures (i.e., cover art). Listen to the editors wax rhapsodic. There will be door prizes!

David G. Hartwell, Beth Meacham, James Minz, Patrick Nielsen Hayden

Sunday 4:00 p H203

How to Run a Film Festival

Garen Daley, James S. Hinsey

Sunday 4:00 p H204

This Book Sucks: How and How not To Write Reviews

What makes a good book review or a good critical piece? What kinds of things should book reviewers do? What kinds of behaviors should they avoid

Tobias Buckell, Thomas A. Easton, Scott Edelman, Janice M. Eisen (m), Steven Sawicki

Sunday 4:00 p H205

Dead Fans Don't Pub Their Ish

Who's the Walt Willis of today? What will we do without Harry Warner Jr.? A fond remembrance of the finest fanzine writers and publishers of the past, and an examination of The State of Fanzine Publishing in the 21st Century? What's being published? What's good? What/s bad

James Bacon, John-Henri Holmberg, Joe Siclari, Geri Sullivan (m)

Sunday 4:00 p H206

Fandom Online

TMI!!! Personalzines were intimate forms of communications among a small group of acquaintances and friends. Compare and contrast to web pages on line, open to umpty billion people. Is there too much information out there? Do we really need to know? Or are live journals the next best thing to being there? Noreascon has nearly 100 mailing lists all by itself. Are we drowning in data and lacking in knowledge? Or are we moving from 6 degrees of separation to 2? How do you cope with your electronic in-basket

Elisabeth Carey (m), Anna Feruglio Dal Dan, Craig Engler, Sharon Sbarsky, James M. Turner

Sunday 4:00 p H208

Raiders of the Lost Ark A Fan Film

Sunday 4:00 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #7 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 4:00 p H210

Filk and Fable

Stories and the songs about them or which inspired them. Panel, Performance, and Reading, with footnotes.

Tanya Huff

Sunday 4:00 p H301

Philosophy and SF

Why, when SF ventures into philosophy, is it typically Plato and early philosophers (with the probably exception of Nietzsche)? Can this be refuted? What's wrong with, say, Hume and Locke

Peter J. Heck, John F. Hertz, Paul Levinson, Bradford Lyau, Jim Mann (m)

Sunday 4:00 p H302

SF: A Modern Mythology

Why not? It's similar to ancient epic poetry and storytelling as both celebratory and hortatory, about good and evil and what virtue consists of. Among other things...

Suzy McKee Charnas, Greer Gilman, Anne Harris, Suford Lewis (m), Uncle River

Sunday 4:00 p H303

Writing for Massively Multiplayer Online Worlds

Good SF/F writing makes or breaks a persistent massively multiplayer online world. Without them,a MMORPG becomes a slayfest, or a simple "go here and do that" list of quests. Experts from the industry talk about how to get more involved in persistent worlds as creative forces from the start of a project to its launch, and what good writing means to a creation of a great game.

Jessica Mulligan, John Scalzi

Sunday 4:00 p H304

Alternate Law

Laws that passed/failed to pass. Laws that were interpreted *differently* ...What kinds of stories have been (should be? ) written using these "what if" ideas

Michael Benveniste (m), Mitchell Freedman, David Friedman, Charlie Petit

Sunday 4:00 p H305

Going to School in a SF/F Environment

A discussion about what schools might be like in SF settings, like a different world, starship, etc. Also, talk about schools you've read about in other works, - from Hogwarts to Sunnydale/Smallville High to Enders' Battle School...What classes would you be taking? Come up with your ideal class schedule from your favorite story!

Lee Martindale, Val Ontell (m), E. Rose Sabin, Mary Turzillo

Sunday 4:00 p H306

Jewish Time-Based Mitzvoth in a Lunar Colony

Jews have found ways to adapt ancient laws to modern and future ideas. from time trave; (across the International Dateline, at least) to vampirism (yes, you are permitted to swallow some blood). So, nu? How does someone observe a time-based commandment when "day" and "night" are artificial concepts. Where will a naturally-flowing spring come from for a mikvah on Mars? Our panel of mavens will engage in pilpul on halachic and non-halachic issues.

Nomi Burstein (m), Solomon Davidoff, Janice Gelb, Daniel Kimmel

Sunday 4:00 p H307

Financial Planning for the Freelancer

How big a cushion should you have before quitting that day job? Are there tricks and techniques for dealing with cash flow problems? And what about retirement

Susan Shwartz

Sunday 4:00 p H309

Slide Show

N. Taylor Blanchard

Sunday 4:00 p H310

Romancing the Philosopher's Stone: Looking for the Science in Magic

Like all long-lived legends and myths, that of the Philosopher's stone that would alloy with a base metal to yield gold, is based on a then dimly-understood reality. Journey back in time to the mystic East to discover the real philosopher's stone, and wonder at the science that still today conjures plenty from the base elements!

David Stephenson

Sunday 4:00 p H311

1984+20: Dystopia Past/Present/Future

Where do we stand compared to the totalitarian state portrayed in Orwell's 1984? Look at where we are now, and 1984's ancestors and descendants - in SF and the real world!

William Tenn, Karin Lowachee, David McMahon, Nick Sagan, James Stevens-Arce (m)

Sunday 4:00 p H312

The Next Plague

Science fiction writers looking for ways to end the world have often turned to plagues. They have a long and fearful history, and new ones are emerging to join the old standbys. AIDS remains devastating in the less-developed world. West Nile, Ebola, Aids, SARS, Bird Flu and other diseases are becoming familiar to us all. The easy international travel that makes possible events like a Worldcon also breaks down barriers to the spread of disease. Some experts say that it is just a matter of time before the world is hit by another major flu epidemic, one that will sweep across the globe and kill tens of millions, or even more. Others talk about the dreaded super-virus, something like an airborne Ebola that could extinguish human civilization in a matter of weeks. Antibiotic- resistant tuberculosis is spreading. Even bacterial infections are becoming immune to antibiotics and may pose a real threat to humanity as well. Is this a time bomb akin to an Armageddon asteroid? What are the odds looking like? Should I buy that isolated log cabin in the mountains

Zara Baxter, Herb Kauderer, Perrianne Lurie (m), Jed Shumsky, Ronald Taylor

Sunday 4:00 p Art Show

Art Show Pick Up and Pay

Sunday 4:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Patricia Bray, Mike Conrad, Ellen Datlow, Gardner Dozois, Frederik Pohl, Madeleine E. Robins, Martha Wells

Sunday 4:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Kevin J. Anderson, Jack Dann, Diane Duane

Sunday 4:00 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Sunday 4:00 p Beacon D

First Contact (7-12)

Talk and role-play about what you would do if you met aliens for the first time!

Matthew Jarpe

Sunday 4:00 p Beacon F

Yarn Bug [ages 4-8]

Yarn, wiggle eyes and a lot of wrapping will help build up these funny creatures

Sunday 4:00 p Clarendon

How To Pub a Songbook

Gary D. McGath

Sunday 4:00 p Dalton

Using Occult Science as SF Background

Does there have to be any significant difference between SF and Fantasy

Jacqueline Lichtenberg

Sunday 4:00 p Exeter

Reading

Hilari L. Bell

Sunday 4:00 p Grand Ballroom

Surge of Power

Presented by the Director, Michael Donahue

Sunday 4:00 p Hampton

Reading (1 hour)

Cory Doctorow

Sunday 4:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

David B. Coe, Harry Harrison, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe, Larry Niven

Sunday 4:00 p Liberty A

Hypoglycemia Discussion Group (Benita Gagne)

Sunday 4:00 p Republic A

Bubblegum Crisis [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 4:00 p Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon) - Tom Veal

Sunday 4:30 p H203

Dark Laugher: The Satire of William Tenn (Robert James)

Sunday 4:30 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #8 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 4:30 p H307

The Hospital of the Future

Robert I. Katz

Sunday 4:30 p Dalton

Tricking Yourself Into Actually Writing

Kathleen Kudlinski

Sunday 4:30 p Exeter

Reading

David C. Kopaska-Merkel

Sunday 4:45 p Republic A

Bubblegum Crisis #2 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 5:00 p H100

Who Stole Ed's Pants

Frame your opponents for pants theft in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice. (3-4 players per game)

Sunday 5:00 p H203

Moby Dick

Why is it the favorite mainstream novel of a lot of SF types

Debra Doyle

Sunday 5:00 p H204

Alternate Publication Strategies

Paula Guran

Sunday 5:00 p H205

The Pains (and Promises) of Rejection Slips

How can they actually be constructive? (And why are so many of them anything *but*?)

Janna Silverstein, Charles Stross, Teresa Nielsen Hayden (m), Jo Walton

Sunday 5:00 p H206

The Ambassador from Rigel Has Arrived...

...and made us an offer we can't refuse...Or can we? The panelists from Earth debate the merits of the plan with the ambassador...Is Earth a Third World country is this scenario

Billie Aul (m), Jeffrey A. Carver, Keith R. A. DeCandido, Jim Young

Sunday 5:00 p H208

Kaze Ghost Warrior

Sunday 5:00 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #9 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 5:00 p H210

Concert

Jordin T. Kare

Sunday 5:00 p H301

The Fantasy Amateur Press Association

The past and present glories, scandals, inventions and secret hidden details of FAPA. FAPA is the longest running discussion group in fandom. Since 1937, they've had discussions ranging from race relations in fandom, nuclear politics during WWII, to fannish silliness, and even science fiction, fantasy and horror. Our Guest of Honor Jack Speer has been part of this from the beginning. He and others will tell you of the glories and follies of FAPA, and teach you what blitzkrieg really meant.

John F. Hertz (m), Fred Lerner, Jack Speer, Milton F. Stevens

Sunday 5:00 p H302

Stargate: New SF Franchise

Does Stargate have the followers and scope of vision to perpetuate itself in endless sequel show, a la Star Trek

MaryAnn Johanson, Anthony R. Lewis (m), Sandra McDonald, Ann Tonsor Zeddies

Sunday 5:00 p H303

Steven Silver's Trivia Game

Steven H. Silver

Sunday 5:00 p H304

The Most Alien Alien

What makes an alien particularly alien? How can writers evoke a genuine sense of "otherness" in their non-human creations

Rosemary Kirstein, Steven Popkes, Wen Spencer, Karen Traviss (m), Walter Jon Williams

Sunday 5:00 p H305

Tolkien vs. Peake

Is it only a twist of fate that Tolkien is popular and Peake is only beloved of a few? What would a fantasy genre based on Peake be like? Would a Peake clone be any less bad than a Tolkien clone? Why would they be in opposition? (Would they be??)

jan howard finder (m), Greer Gilman, Darrell Schweitzer

Sunday 5:00 p H306

Us and Them: Are Categories Necessary

Humans are very good at dividing people up into groups, but not so good at breaking down those divisions, as demonstrated by the contested space currently surrounding gender and race issues. How is Western society dealing with these issues? Are alternative systems of creating non-judgmental categories, such as Myers-Briggs, useful in this endeavor? Are things like diversity training and workplace tolerance standards helpful in overcoming differences

Tobias Buckell, Nancy Kress, Suford Lewis (m), Don Sakers

Sunday 5:00 p H307

The Fan World of the Future

In 1939, Sam Moskowitz gave on talk on this very same topic...and it's interesting to note that fandom didn't fundamentally change for decades!. What aspects of fandom are very "now" and what are still very "then"? Will the fan world of the future be like today's, or will fandom evaporate into a world where science fiction is a way of life

Moshe Feder, Mike Glyer, Edie Stern (m), Geri Sullivan, Peter Weston

Sunday 5:00 p H309

The Art of Mike Conrad

Mike Conrad

Sunday 5:00 p H310

Discoveries That Weren't: Near Misses in Science

Cold fusion wasn't the first. Scientists talk about promising results that turned out to be dead ends. At the other extreme, what experiments might have led to earlier advances of scientific theory if only scientists had known what they were seeing? And then there were the great scientific mistakes...that actually worked! Teflon, Penicillin, post-its...and where would we be without Silly Putty? A semi-serious look at what science is really all about!

John G. Cramer, Ctein, Howard Davidson (m), Robert A. Metzger, W. A. Thomasson

Sunday 5:00 p H311

The Effects of Litigation on the Future

Do the courts threaten our ability to make scientific and technical advances? (And - is this a good or bad thing?) What is the place of litigation in today's society - and what are the trends that might brighten or darken our future?)

Christopher Cevasco (m), Harold Feld, Melinda Snodgrass

Sunday 5:00 p H312

The Great Character Swap

."..They're Detectives!" Huh? Well, it's the punch line of any number of jokes: "He's a Priest, She's a Lawyer. Together They're Detectives!" (or, "They Fight Crime!"). But what would happen if various SF characters were dropped into other universe's stories? Would R. Daneel Olivaw and Bruce Wayne get together? Would Dr. Susan Calvin make it in the Discworld? Sherlock Holmes in Oz (Hmmm...well, that one has probably been done...) Enjoy!

Daniel P. Dern, Tom Galloway (m), Larry Ganem, Leigh Grossman, David Levine

Sunday 5:00 p Autographing

Autographing

Michael Dobson, Beth Hilgartner, Laura Resnick

Sunday 5:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Geoffrey A. Landis, Chris Moriarty, Janine Ellen Young

Sunday 5:00 p Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Sunday 5:00 p Beacon D

Story-Telling (7-12)

David C. Kopaska-Merkel

Sunday 5:00 p Beacon F

Shrinky Dinks [ages 4-12]

Wonderful plastic you can color and then shrink in to a permanent piece of jewelry.

Sunday 5:00 p Exeter

Reading

Scott Westerfeld

Sunday 5:00 p Fan Lounge

Knitting

Sunday 5:00 p Hampton

Reading

Joe Haldeman

Sunday 5:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Stephen Leigh, Deborah Ross, Steve Saffel, Shane Tourtellotte

Sunday 5:00 p Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon)

Priscilla Olson

Sunday 5:30 p H203

Teaching SF and Fantasy in the Public Schools

As we all know, genre literature is trivial, worthless, and depraved -- and yet, for some reason, it isn't routinely taught in the secondary school English classroom. There are signs that this prejudice is eroding. Our two presenterswill talk about a set of online Tolkien lesson plans they designed for Houghton Mifflin, and about the increasing legitimization of SF and fantasy in our public schools.

James Morrow, Kathy Morrow

Sunday 5:30 p H204

Australian Fiction

Zara Baxter, Jack Dann

Sunday 5:30 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #10 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 5:30 p H210

Concert

Terence Chua

Sunday 5:30 p Dalton

New Categories for the Hugos

Are there really elements of science fiction and/or fandom that are not being recognized by our awards system? Should there be new categories added to the already extensive list of awards that we, as a community, give? Are there existing categories that should be split/changed/removed

Chris Barkley, Craig Miller, Kevin Standlee (m), Ben Yalow

Sunday 5:30 p Exeter

Reading

Mike Brotherton

Sunday 5:30 p Hampton

Reading

Jacqueline Lichtenberg

Sunday 5:45 p Republic A

Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade [Subtitled] [16 +]

Sunday 6:00 p

Masquerade Green Room Open for Entrants

Sunday 6:00 p H100

Monkeys on the Moon

Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from Eight Foot Llama? (2 - 4 players per game.)

Sunday 6:00 p H107

"Revisions"

Isaac Szpindel

Sunday 6:00 p H203

Building a Wider Audience for Genre Criticism Through Community Video/Cable (Philip Kaveny)

Sunday 6:00 p H204

Lifestyles of the Niche and Fannish

Alternative lifestyles are much more common in fandom than in the general populace. Why? Is it just that people who would be delighted to have dinner with aliens are more accepting, or is there more to it? We've had naked ladies and skiiny dipping, line marriages and less easy-to-explain liaisons. Do fans have the same mores as the the general population. Now? In the past? How about the future??

Bey King

Sunday 6:00 p H205

Portfolio: The Artist's Most Important Tool

What's in yours? What goes in, what stays out, how it's prsentent, and where it's sent...the portfolio represents the artists in places he or she can't be, How can you put together the best one possible?

Jael

Sunday 6:00 p H206

Worldcon -- the Movie

If the Worldcon were a movie, whom would we cast in all the roles? Note: we do insist (sez the female fan typing this) that Neil Gaiman be played by Himself...

Bob Devney

Sunday 6:00 p H208

Robots Don't Cry/ Rogue Farm

Sunday 6:00 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #11 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 6:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Robert Buettner, Juanita Coulson, Karl Schroeder

Sunday 6:00 p Clarendon

Running a Worldcon Filk Program

What's worked, and what's been less than successful. You share your stories, and we'll share ours.

J. Spencer Love, Priscilla Olson

Sunday 6:00 p ConCourse

Information Closes

Sunday 6:00 p Con Suite Foyer

Music

Sunday 6:00 p Exeter

Reading

Terry McGarry

Sunday 6:00 p Hall D

Dealers Closes

Sunday 6:00 p Hampton

Reading

Jean Lorrah

Sunday 6:30 p H100

Mechwarrior Single Faction Tournament

Bring your mechanized army and test it in this Wizkids sanctioned event [450 pts. Single Faction]

Sunday 6:30 p H203

Heinlein and the Question of Incest (Robert James, Bill Patterson)

Sunday 6:30 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #12 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 6:30 p H210

Concert by The Lothars

Sunday 6:30 p Exeter

Reading

Uncle River

Sunday 6:30 p Hampton

Reading

Mark W. Tiedemann

Sunday 7:00 p H100

Who Stole Ed's Pants

Frame your opponents for pants theft in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice. (3-4 players per game)

Sunday 7:00 p H209

Record Of Lodoss War, #13 [Subtitled] [13 +]

Sunday 7:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Sunday 7:00 p Exeter

Reading

F. Brett Cox

Sunday 7:00 p Hampton

Reading

Charles Oberndorf

Sunday 7:30 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 7:30 p Beacon D

Games and Crafts during the Masquerade [ages 7+] (Randy Hoffman, Ailsa Ek, Steven Chalker)

Sunday 7:30 p Exeter

Reading

Diane Turnshek

Sunday 7:30 p Hampton

Reading

Tanya Huff

Sunday 7:30 p Republic A

Blue Seed 19 -26 [Subtitled]

Sunday 8:00 p H100

Monkeys on the Moon

Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from Eight Foot Llama? (2 - 4 players per game.)

Sunday 8:00 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 8:00 p Clarendon

Open Filk

Sunday 8:00 p Dalton

Open Filk - No taping

Sunday 8:00 p Exeter

Reading

Herb Kauderer

Sunday 8:00 p Gardner

Drum Circle

Sunday 8:00 p Hall A

Registration Closes

Sunday 8:00 p Hampton

Reading

Jay Lake

Sunday 8:30 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 8:30 p Auditorium

The Masquerade

Susan de Guardiola

Sunday 9:00 p H100

Blood and Cardstock Players Choice

Open demo sessions. Learn how to play exciting games like Showbiz and Counting ZZZs

Sunday 9:00 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 9:00 p Conference

Filk Office Re-Opens

Sunday 9:00 p Exeter

Rendezvous

Sunday 9:00 p Gardner

Open Filk

Sunday 9:00 p Hampton

Open Filk

Sunday 9:30 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 10:00 p H205

Zen Scavenger Hunt

Chris Barkley

Sunday 10:00 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 10:00 p Grand Ballroom

Bubba Ho-Tep

Sunday 10:30 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 11:00 p H206

Lame Excuses...I Have Given to Keep on Reading

A confessional... Have you ever feigned a headache when your beloved feels romantic to turn one more page? Have you ever avoided chores by claimed your hemorrhoids are flaring up so you can finish a book? If this sounds familiar, this panel is for you. Help your fellow book addict by building up their repertoire of excuses.

John Pomeranz

Sunday 11:00 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 11:00 p Mended Drum

Concert by Pete Grubbs

Sunday 11:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Sunday 11:00 p Exeter

Open Filk

Sunday 11:00 p Gardner

Rendezvous

Sunday 11:00 p Republic A

Miyuki-chan In Wonderland [Subtitled] [15 +]

Sunday 11:30 p H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Sunday 11:30 p Republic A

Cowboy Bebop: The Movie [Dubbed] [R]

Sunday 12:00 m

Childcare Closes

Sunday 12:00 m H209

MS 080 Team [Subtitled]

Monday

Monday 0:00 a Mended Drum

Show Tunes Singalong

Monday 1:00 a Mended Drum

Last Call at the Mended Drum

Monday 1:00 a Gardner

Open Filk

Monday 1:00 a Republic A

Dragon Half [Subtitled] [15 +]

Monday 1:30 a Republic A

Sorcerer On The Rocks [Subtitled] [17 +]

Monday 2:00 a

Hynes Closes

Monday 2:00 a

Pedestrian Overpass to Marriott Closed

Monday 2:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Closes

Monday 2:30 a Republic A

Vampire Princess Miyu OVA [Subtitled]

Monday 3:00 a Conference

Filk Office Closes

Monday 3:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Closes

Monday 7:00 a Republic A

Wedding Peach [13 +]

Monday 8:00 a

Hynes Open for Setup Only

Monday 9:00 a

Hynes Open

Monday 9:00 a Grand Ballroom

Lord of The Rings: Fellowship of the Ring

Monday 9:00 a Hall A

Registration Open

Monday 9:00 a ConSuite

Con Suite Opens

Monday 9:30 a

Childcare Opens

Monday 9:30 a H203

The Virtual Manifest: "Solaris" and the Peristence of Memory (Gerald Lucas)

Monday 9:30 a Beacon A

Moving to Music [ages 1-7]

Clap and sing to the music of Jim Cosgrove, a Kansas City children's folk singer.

Monday 9:30 a Beacon F

Masks [ages 2-8]

What costume would be completed or improved with a colorful mask? Come glue, stick and create a fun mask to wear.

Monday 9:30 a Conference

Filk Office Opens

Monday 9:30 a Exeter

Reading

E. Rose Sabin

Monday 9:30 a Hall A

Shotokan Karate Workshop

Kenn Bates, Keith G. Kato

Monday 9:30 a Hampton

Reading

Susan Shwartz

Monday 9:30 a Republic A

Riding Bean [Subtitled] [N/R]

Monday 10:00 a

Masquerade Registration Desk Opens for Pickup of Tapes/Documentation

Monday 10:00 a H100

Thud: The Discworld Boardgame

Learn to play this exciting, new board game based on the dwarfish game of Hnaflbaflsnifkwhifltafl from Terry Pratchett's Discworld universe. (2 players per game)

Monday 10:00 a H102

Sing Around the Virtual Campfire

Monday 10:00 a H203

The He(Art) of Communication in James E. Gunn's "The Listeners" (Barbara Bengals)

Monday 10:00 a H206

Writerly Friendship

What's it like to start and maintain a friendship with another writer? How about rivalry? Collaboration? What part is played by professional admiration? How about by alcohol? Can only another ink-stained wretch really understand

James Patrick Kelly (m), George R. R. Martin, Ann Tonsor Zeddies

Monday 10:00 a H208

Firefly Marathon, Episode 12 - End

Monday 10:00 a H209

The Castle Of Cagliostro [Subtitled] [N/R]

Monday 10:00 a H210

WSFS Business Meeting, Third Main Session (If required)

If the meetings earlier in the convention were unable to process all official business, we will consider what is left today. If the WSFS Mark Protection Committee was unable to meet on Sunday, it will meet here instead. Check the convention newsletter to find out if there will be a Monday Business Meeting or Mark Protection Committee Meeting.

Monday 10:00 a H301

Print on Demand - for Artists

Jael

Monday 10:00 a H303

Burnout

Burnout - what it it? Causes and methods of dealing with this too-common problem...(but wait! Is that smoke I smell?)

Priscilla Olson

Monday 10:00 a H305

Art Auction Overflow

If needed.

Monday 10:00 a H306

The Next Killer App

Software companies are in a holding pattern, kludging up their programs with unwanted features while searching for the next Killer Application. Can science fiction fans think up the Killer App? And could it be implemented if we did

Daniel P. Dern, Henry Jenkins, John Moore, P. J. Plauger, Edie Stern (m)

Monday 10:00 a H307

Island Ecologies

Amy Thomson

Monday 10:00 a H309

McMullen's Trek

"Slide show" and discussion

Sean McMullen

Monday 10:00 a H310

SF Museum Slide Show

OK - they've got Kirk's command chair -- but also first editions of Bradbury and Asimov. See mouth-watering highlights here.

Leslie Howle

Monday 10:00 a H311

Curses!

Profanity for fantasy and SF--what makes made-up profanity either work or fail? Panelists can bring in examples of both, and share their own techniques for creating profanity that has the same emotional weight that real profanity does.

Hilari L. Bell (m), Susan Casper, Larry Ganem, Mark Mandel, Vera Nazarian, Shara R. Zoll

Monday 10:00 a H312

The SF of William Tenn

In about 60 stories published from the 1940s through the 1960s, our Guest of Honor Phil Klass made his pseudonym William Tenn a guarantee of sharp, often satirical, first- rate SF. But they say satire closes on Saturday night. Do these barbs still open wounds today

Jim Mann (m), Kathy Morrow, Charles Oberndorf, Graham Sleight, Jo Walton

Monday 10:00 a Art Show

Art Show Open for Pickup and Pay and Artist's Check-out

Monday 10:00 a Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Monday 10:00 a Beacon D

Children's/YA (1-hour) Reading (7-12)

Kathleen Kudlinski

Monday 10:00 a Beacon F

Kitchen Science [ages 2-7]

Fun with things from the kitchen and some explanation on why they work.

Monday 10:00 a Exeter

Reading

Daniel Hatch

Monday 10:00 a Gardner

Writing Workshop (7-12)

How do you write a story

Elizabeth Bear

Monday 10:00 a Hall D

Dealers Open

Monday 10:00 a Hampton

Reading

Mary Turzillo

Monday 10:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Carol Berg, Michael A. Burstein, Toni L. P. Kelner, Madeleine E. Robins

Monday 10:00 a Docent Tour

Village Tour (of the Worldcon)

A general orientation tour of the convention.

John F. Hertz

Monday 10:15 a Republic A

Happy Lesson #1 - 5

Monday 10:30 a H204

About Author Scams

Charlie Petit

Monday 10:30 a H205

One Language To Rule Them All

Inventing a language with the intent to persuade other people to actually learn and speat it, whethe it's intended as a global lingua franca (e.g., Esperanto) or as a "lingua superior" (a language designed to be more more logical or more efficient than any natural language, e.g., Loglan/Lojban, Babel-17) -- as opposed to inventing a language for purely literary or esthetic purposes (e.g., Quenya, Klingon) -- is fraught with problems. Discuss some of these problems with a "conLanger" (inventer of constructed languages).

Timothy L. Smith

Monday 10:30 a H301

The Afshar Experiment: A Farewell to Copenhagen

Update on Afshar's new quantum 2-slit experiment: does it falsify the Copenhagen and Many-Worlds interpretations of quantum mechanics.

John G. Cramer

Monday 10:30 a H303

Commemorative Stamps for SF Superstars

Chris Barkley

Monday 10:30 a H307

Surviving a College Creative Writing Class

Steve Miller (m)

Monday 10:30 a Exeter

Reading

Benjamin Rosenbaum

Monday 10:30 a Hampton

Reading

Scott Edelman

Monday 11:00 a

Photo Proofs and Ordering of Photos at Masquerade Registration

Monday 11:00 a H203

Raising Gifted Children

Are your parenting models Leto and Jessica, Baslim the Cripple, or the Dursleys? Can you keep up intellectually? Should you push or be pulled? Should he play outside, not just with the symphony. Which explosives can your future rocket scientist keep in her room

Janice M. Eisen

Monday 11:00 a H204

Why I Write YA Books

Harder, easier, sells better...or just more fun! (And writing what you wanted to read when you were a kid isn't bad either,huh?) Agree or disagree -- and discuss!

Beth Hilgartner, Rebecca Moesta, Tamora Pierce (m), E. Rose Sabin

Monday 11:00 a H205

Tuckerizations

From Flying Sorcerers to Fallen Angels. "Tuckerisation," the use of real-life fans and pros in fictional situations, has a long and honorable history. Four proponents of the art discuss the fun they had and the responses they received.

Michael F. Flynn (m), David Gerrold, Larry Niven

Monday 11:00 a H206

Warping the Classics

Perverse interpretations of classical SF and Fantasy. LOTR as a musical comedy (or a Klingon parable?) "A Christmas Carol" featuring Scrooge as a time-traveling mutant? Arrgh!

Mike Conrad, John M. Ford, Mark Mandel, John Pomeranz (m), Darrell Schweitzer

Monday 11:00 a H301

Ethical Issues in Neuroscience

Overprescribing for the undersymptomed. Animal testing. Predictive jail sentencing for the "criminal brain protein" gene Employment screening for potential Alzheimer's. Souped- up serotonin. Let's think about these and other moral quandaries before they come to a head...

Elizabeth Moon (m), Shane Tourtellotte, Karen Traviss, Eric M. Van

Monday 11:00 a H302

Best Short Stories of 2004 (so far...)

Short stories are the lifeblood of the field, where new writers build their reputations and established writers do their best to yank it in new directions. But how do you keep up, or just find the fest? A panel of editors of "best of the year" anthologies five an overview of what's happening in short fiction right now, the best stories of the year (so far!), and just what might be on next year's award ballots.

Kathryn Cramer, Jack Dann, Ellen Datlow, Gardner Dozois, Gavin Grant, Jonathan Strahan (m)

Monday 11:00 a H303

The Science Fiction Village

It's our culture, and we'll stick with it!

Jack L. Chalker, John F. Hertz (m), Rusty Hevelin, Rich Lynch, Hank Reinhardt, Walter Jon Williams

Monday 11:00 a H304

Images of Loss in LOTR

Much of the power of LOTR comes from the deep sense of loss that fills it: The elves' loss of Middle Earth, Men's loss of life, Frodo's loss of the Shire, Arwen's loss of immortality - and there are many others, even Gollum's loss of the Ring. Bittersweet images all. Are these essential to the enduring strength of Tolkien's universe? Would we love it as much without the final image of the magic leaving Middle Earth, as the elves (and ringbearers) take the straight path across the sea to the West.

Debra Doyle, Mary Kay Kare (m), Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Jo Walton

Monday 11:00 a H305

Obsolete High Technology

What was the highest of tech in 1910? Radio and the Titanic. 1940s' Enigma, bombsights and fission. 1960's - IBMs S360 (and the pill?), and a man on the moon. What's your candidate for the past technology that's passT today. What do you think will most quickly become quaint tomorrow? Cutting edge SF ideasquickly become relegated to background items in the next generation of SF (such as nanotechnology). So, what are those new big SCIENCE ideas? (Are there really any new science ideas, or just a merging and blending of existing ones?)

Bill Higgins, Jordin T. Kare (m), Robert A. Metzger, Charles Stross

Monday 11:00 a H306

Why We Hate Our Heroes

Skywalker? Sheridan? Is this a media phenomenon or does it happen with books too? If so, why? If not, why not? What keeps you liking a narrative whose protagonist you hate? Do we get some satisfaction out of disliking them, or is it a detriment? Do we root for them to lose? Is it specific to particular characters, or something intrinsic to the hero's role? What other types of characters do we like and/or identify with, instead? Why is it so hard to be a hero

Carol Berg, Liz Gorinsky, Jacqueline Lichtenberg, S. M. Stirling

Monday 11:00 a H307

The Creation of the U.S. Tradition of Pulp SF

How A. Merritt and Edgar Rice Burroughs changed the direction of the pulp industry, and led to the development of the modern SF style and traditions.

Jim Young

Monday 11:00 a H309

In Space Propulsion Systems

Les Johnson

Monday 11:00 a H310

What's New in Astronomy

Mars has been hogging the headlines, but astronomers have learned a lot of neat stuff about the rest of the cosmos in the past year. Our intrepid panelists will tell the audience what they found neat and wonderful.

Mike Brotherton, Guy Consolmagno, Ctein (m), G. David Nordley, Mark L. Olson

Monday 11:00 a H311

It's a Mystery...

Why do so many SF fans enjoy mysteries - in fact, why does anyone enjoy a mystery? And what's the appeal of occasionally crossing genres to dabble in both? Discuss what makes a good mystery, and why this sometimes works so well with science fiction.

Joshua Bilmes (m), Charlaine Harris, Jay Caselberg, Toni L. P. Kelner, Wen Spencer

Monday 11:00 a H312

The Serious Side of Terry Pratchett

Other writers examine the message behind the merriment in the works of one of our Guests. What themes occur throughout? How does he combine wisdom with humor.

Esther Friesner, Tanya Huff, Peter Morwood, Graham Sleight (m)

Monday 11:00 a Art Show

Tour of the Retro Art Exhibit

Robert K. Wiener

Monday 11:00 a Autographing

Autographing

Kevin J. Anderson, Steve Antczak, F. Brett Cox, James Alan Gardner, Jay Lake, Louise Marley, Allen Steele

Monday 11:00 a Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Monday 11:00 a Beacon D

Junkyard Aliens (7-12)

Take the craft materials left from five days of activities, and see what you come up with.

Monday 11:00 a Beacon F

Bingo Make and Play [ages 3-6]

Everyone gets a blank bingo card and 25 stickers to put on their grid. We'll play as many games of Bingo as interest holds and then have fun with the leftover stickers.

Monday 11:00 a Clarendon

How to Create Fictionalized Characters from Historical Figures

Walter Scott said real figures should be background characters only. Genre writers ignore that rule. How did our writers do with Clemens, Hitler, Philby and Shakespeare? What lessons emerge from these and other examples? How can the aspiring author work within historical realities

Elizabeth Caldwell

Monday 11:00 a Dalton

The Medieval Technology and Science that Fantasy Ignores

Sean McMullen

Monday 11:00 a Exeter

Reading

Peter J. Heck

Monday 11:00 a Gardner

How to Defend Yourself Against Alien Invaders (7-12)

Self defense techniques. Wear comfortable clothing

Kenn Bates, Keith G. Kato

Monday 11:00 a Hampton

Reading

Amy Thomson

Monday 11:00 a ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Lois McMaster Bujold, Cory Doctorow, Laura Anne Gilman, Mindy Klasky

Monday 11:00 a ConSuite

The Last Dangerous Knit-together

Monday 11:30 a H203

19th Century Influence on 21st Century Writing

How much of a debt does modern SF/F/H owe to 19th century writers such as H.G. Wells, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelly and Lewis Carroll? Come and explore the origins of the genre in the "penny dreadfuls," children's literature and popular novels of the Georgian and Victorian periods.

Melanie Fletcher

Monday 11:30 a H307

About Judith Merril

Elisabeth Carey

Monday 11:30 a Clarendon

My Tour of Middle Earth

What I did on my summer vacation to Middle-earth during January of 2004! (I did get the T-shirt.)

jan howard finder

Monday 11:30 a Dalton

Enjoying J.D. Robb

Priscilla Olson

Monday 11:30 a Exeter

Reading

Geoffrey A. Landis

Monday 11:30 a Hampton

Reading

Suzy McKee Charnas

Monday 12:00 n H100

Grave Robbers From Outer Space

Players compete to make a really bad SF/Horror B movie while unleashing B-movie monsters on other players movies. Whoever has the best movie when the credits roll is the winner. [2 - 6 players]

Monday 12:00 n H107

"First Heroes" anthology

Monday 12:00 n H203

Teaching Tolkien

Faye Ringel

Monday 12:00 n H204

After the Masquerade

A postmortem on the Noreascon 4 Masquerade, and the costumes therein...

Richard Hill, Kevin P. Roche

Monday 12:00 n H205

After the Worldcon - What

You've just attended your first convention. Now where do you go? A look at the scene beyond worldcon, and suggestions on how to find other conventions, how to tell them apart, and how to get more out of them.

Jack L. Chalker, Mary Kay Kare, Grant Kruger, John Pomeranz (m)

Monday 12:00 n H206

Cute Aliens: Kill Them Now

Adorable fluffy-bunny aliens are the bane of science fiction fans everywhere. Why do they exist? How do we stamp them out of our stories? Do they ever serve a good purpose? And on the other hand, do they really keep people from taking science fiction seriously? (Or is it the other way around?)

Roger MacBride Allen, Steven Popkes

Monday 12:00 n H209

Here is Greenwood [English]

Monday 12:00 n H210

Filk Pickup Concert

Monday 12:00 n H301

Mundane Media and SF

Why is there so often a disconnect between the way fandom works and the way its portrayed in the media? Do they not get it or can they simply not get beyond their preconceptions? What can be done to get more objective reporting of conventions, SF books, media, etc.

Lynn Gold, Sally Wiener Grotta, Daniel Hatch, Daniel Kimmel (m)

Monday 12:00 n H302

SF: Transcendent Adventure

What is it? How does this term capture the essence of stuff that couldn't possibly be written in any other genre

Jim Frenkel, David G. Hartwell (m), Charles Oberndorf, Patrick Nielsen Hayden

Monday 12:00 n H303

Space Habitats and Biospheres

Geodesic domes! O'Neill colonies! Rotating space stations! Can we really design an artificial environment in which human beings can thrive? How might we go about doing so

Terry Franklin (m), James Killus, Joseph Lazzaro, Mary H. Rosenblum

Monday 12:00 n H304

What's in a Name

How do you name your characters? This is a sweeping generalization, but naming conventions in SF tend to be conservative, at least for human characters. How many stories do we read set in distant futures or other worlds in which people have names that sound like my neighbors (two names to a customer, family name last)? This is not realistic because it assumes the continued cultural dominance of a US or Western-centered world indefinitely. The way an author handles handles says something about the assumptions underlying a story (including the root assumption that sentient creatures are individuals), while the very sound of a character's name may add to the sense of the milieu, as fantasy writers well know. How could names also include such alien possibilities as clan, hive, guild, chemicals, colors...and what else

James Alan Gardner, Katherine Kurtz, Sharon Lee, Laurie J. Marks, John McDaid (m)

Monday 12:00 n H305

About "Dune"

Kevin J. Anderson

Monday 12:00 n H306

Chickpunk

Devoted to the wave of women writing cyberpunk-influenced hard SF. Why now

Elizabeth Bear, M. M. Buckner, Karin Lowachee, Chris Moriarty (m), Janine Ellen Young

Monday 12:00 n H307

Comics: Conventional Wisdom Was...

Superman could never be in a team book because he was *way* too powerful to be a team player? Fans held this notion for years (somewhat encouraged by DC editors). Yet Superman joined the Justice League and sales are through the roof. And take the Bizarro world: the conventional wisdom is that new stories can't be retold because they can't be funny and still politically correct. Is this true? What are other bits of comics conventional wisdom that may not be as true as we once thought

Bob Greenberger, Steve Saffel, Barry Short (m)

Monday 12:00 n H309

Working at the WETA Workshop (2 hours)

Wherein the DUFF winner shows-and-tells about his experiences working on LotR in WETA Workshop and WETA Digital. Where else can you learn about novel uses for gelatin and one and a half tons of KY jelly...

Norman Cates

Monday 12:00 n H310

The Art of David Mattingly

Slide show

David B. Mattingly

Monday 12:00 n H311

Alternate Holocausts

Why is this timeline different from all other timelines? There have been some works that have explored Jewish alternate history, such as Poul Anderson's "In the House of Sorrows" and Robert Silverberg's "To the Promised Land." There have also been many potential turning points that could be explored - "What if the Maccabees succeeded in their revolt?" or "What if the Roman Empire adopted Judaism as the official religion?" The panel looks at Jewish alternate history, with special attention to the Holocaust.

Michael A. Burstein (m), Evelyn C. Leeper, Susan Shwartz

Monday 12:00 n H312

William Tenn Interview

Harry Harrison, William Tenn

Monday 12:00 n Autographing

Autographing

Paul Barnett, Charlaine Harris, Paul Levinson, Wil McDermott, Terry Pratchett, Mary Turzillo

Monday 12:00 n Beacon A

Open Playtime [ages 1-6]

We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and other kids to play with.

Monday 12:00 n Beacon D

Beady Familiars [ages 7-12] (Persis Thorndike)

Owls, cats, rats, toads; come bead a familiar key chain for your backpack.

Monday 12:00 n Beacon F

Magic Wands [ages 2-12]

Turn a chopstick into a magic wand to bring your imagination to life.

Monday 12:00 n Clarendon

Math and Physics/Myth and Dreams

How are these different symbolic languages used for addressing remarkably similar questions

Uncle River, Dennis Schmidt

Monday 12:00 n ConCourse

Fan History Tour

Joe Siclari

Monday 12:00 n Dalton

Eyetoy to the Holodecks: The Near and Far Future of Video Games

Three professionals from the industry discuss the possibilities for video games in the near and far future. What will be the next innovation in the next five years? Ten years? And most importantly, when can you expect your holodeck

Michael Gilmartin, Clarinda Merripen (m), Jessica Mulligan

Monday 12:00 n Exeter

Reading

Stephen Dedman

Monday 12:00 n Grand Ballroom

Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Monday 12:00 n Hampton

Reading

Jim Grimsley

Monday 12:00 n ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Scott Edelman, John G. Hemry, P. C. Hodgell, James Morrow

Monday 12:15 p Republic A

Golddigger #1 - 2 [English] [N/R]

Monday 12:30 p H210

Filk Request/One-Shots Concert

Monday 12:30 p Clarendon

International Copyright Issues

Cory Doctorow

Monday 12:30 p Exeter

Reading

David Gerrold

Monday 12:30 p Hampton

Reading

Martha Soukup

Monday 1:00 p H107

Childhood's End

A round-table discussion of the 1953 Retro Hugo nominated novel.

Rusty Hevelin

Monday 1:00 p H203

Teaching/Advising SF/F/H at Religious Institutions (Dennis Perry, Sally Taylor, Brandon Sanderson)

Monday 1:00 p H204

The Bodice Fights Back! - Worst Costuming Disasters

Well...now we can all look back and laugh, right? (And maybe our panelists will demonstrate what a real wardrobe malfunction is!)

Richard Hill, Janet Catherine Johnston (m), Kimberly Ann Kindya, Sandra G. Pettinger

Monday 1:00 p H205

A Farewell to Mimosa

30 ishes were pubbed from 1982 through 2003, and the editors were six-time winners of the Best Fanzine Hugo for this revered zine, which they declared "very much devoted to the preservation of the history of science fiction fandom." Let's reminisce.

John F. Hertz, Rich Lynch, Nicki Lynch

Monday 1:00 p H206

After the Con Is Over...

Once the con is over, the committee is usually ready to go to sleep for a while. After all, it's over, isn't it? What is involved in closing out a con? To start with, how does one debrief a con to learn from its mistakes without re- fighting all the wars? Are there debriefing techniques which can help to retain the lessons learned? Are debriefings useful? Are they necessary? Is a blame-free discussion even possible? What sorts of things are needed to keep the group together? If the con went badly, how can the wounds be healed enough that the group can do the next con better? (This is the old lessons-learned issue again.) The problems after a poor con are quite different than after a good one, but are they completely different/ Can you describe the differences and similarities? Be sure to talk about both regionals and Worldcons. What is the role of failure

Elaine Brennan, David R. Howell, Anthony R. Lewis, Kevin Standlee, Bill Sutton (m)

Monday 1:00 p H208

The Trouble with Trailers

How are the expectations set up by movie trailers actually met by the movie itself? What do (those) trailers get right - and what do they get wrong (especially, relative to the movie)? Besides building buzz for the flick, what do the Hollywood types expect to accomplish with trailers? If possible, we will be able to show suggested trailers. Suggestions

Mike Donahue, Craig Miller

Monday 1:00 p H209

Here is Greenwood [English]

Monday 1:00 p H210

Concert

Robin F. Holly, Jonathan Turner

Monday 1:00 p H301

The Flash

There have been enough Flashes (and family members) that they'd practically be their own team book, if they appeared together enough and weren't separated by a thousand years or so. Now that Bart Allen has taken on the handle of Kid Flash, let's look back at the Flashes, from Jay to Barry to Wally to Bart, and all those peripheral characters. What would have happened if: Barry had not died to prevent the Crisis; if Wally hadn't matured from his young adult smart alec/lecher status; if the Tornado Twins hadn't died? (And why has there been so little about the Tornado Twins, anyway?). Just what *is* our fascination with people who can run really fast? And -- is the Flash really better than Green Lantern(s)

Steve Antczak, Tom Galloway (m), Bob Greenberger

Monday 1:00 p H302

The Future of Peace

Does peace have a future, and what is it? When we have it, will it be like Star Trek's philosophy and call it the Untame Country? Or will it be a Shangri-la and be governed as a Republic? What will the national defense folk do, instead

Elizabeth Caldwell (m), Ctein, Joe Haldeman, Ben Jeapes, Steven Popkes

Monday 1:00 p H303

Are Fans Still Slans

"Fans are slans" is an old fannish truism. But is it still true? In fact, was it ever true? Whatever - are present day fans different from the jiants (or even the non-jiants) of the past? If so, how - and what might this indicate for the future? (While you're at, feel free to explode the other lies fandom told you...)

David A. Kyle, Jack Speer, Edie Stern (m), Erwin S. Strauss

Monday 1:00 p H304

Hard Fantasy

Even in genre circles, fantasy is often dismissed by saying that we can just make it all up. The fact is that many fantasy writers go to a good deal of trouble to research and extrapolate their worlds everything from finding period maps of London to checking the etymology of period words or delving into other belief systems to give their magic a sense of reality. It is the factual underpinnings which give a good fantasy the solidity it needs. How is this best done

Duncan W. Allen, Stephen Leigh, Susan Shwartz (m), Liz Williams

Monday 1:00 p H305

Finding a Home in Fandom

Fandom is home to many marginalized folk: smart people, sexual minorities, folks who aren't physically average, a surprising number with Asperger's syndromes or other psychological issues. How come we can all pretty much get along here when we have trouble in the mundane world? What is it about fandom that makes it feel like home? Does fandom help us do better when we get back outside

Billie Aul (m), Elisabeth Carey, Laurie J. Marks, Michael McAfee, Andrew Porter

Monday 1:00 p H306

The Abuse of Biology in SF

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.

Zara Baxter, Perrianne Lurie, Samuel Scheiner (m), Ronald Taylor, W. A. Thomasson

Monday 1:00 p H307

The Mythology of Las Vegas

Elizabeth Bear

Monday 1:00 p H309

Hitting "the Wall"

The inverse of "the singularity" is "the Wall," a technological barrier that can't be surmounted and imposes fundamental limits on progress. The Wall for interplanetary travel is the speed of light; SF writers either accept it or tunnel through it by waving their hands about hyperspace or the Infinite Improbability Drive. The Wall for commercial aviation is the sound barrier; with the demise of the Concorde, airline passengers can fly no faster than they could in a 707 40 years ago. Physicists and engineers talk about ultimate limits to things like information density and the smallest possible transistor. What Walls are coming up, can we dodge them, and what can we do if we can't

Thomas A. Easton (m), P. J. Plauger, Charles Stross

Monday 1:00 p H310

Do It Again!

The pains and pleasures, whys, wherefores, and (occasional) rewards of re-writes.

Tina Beychok, James Cambias, Daniel Hatch (m), Kathleen Kudlinski

Monday 1:00 p H311

Dealing with Job/Family/Life!

Many artists and writers hold a full time job of one sort or another; learn about methods for squeezing time out for SF work. And how do you pursue "the loneliest profession" and have time for your family too

F. Brett Cox, Melanie Fletcher, Paul Levinson (m), Benjamin Rosenbaum

Monday 1:00 p H312

How Stories End

Happily ever after? Well, perhaps not always. But - what makes a satisfying ending? (And, in fact, does a story really need to have an ending anyway? And does it need to have a "happy" ending to leave the reader feeling good?) Discuss favorite endings and why they work so well.

Suzanne Alles Blom, Suzy McKee Charnas, James Patrick Kelly (m), William Tenn, Charles Oberndorf

Monday 1:00 p Autographing

Autographing

K. A. Bedford, John G. Hemry, James Macdonald, Sean McMullen, Josepha Sherman, Wen Spencer

Monday 1:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Peter J. Heck, Matthew Jarpe, Jim Young

Monday 1:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Monday 1:00 p Beacon D

If You Liked Harry Potter...(Kids Reading for Pleasure!) (7-12)

Discuss your favorite books with our panelists. What's your favorite book this year? Come share your thoughts about your favorite books. Create a Top 20 Kids Favorite Books list.

Susan de Guardiola

Monday 1:00 p Beacon F

Kinderfilk with Mary Miller [ages 1-6]

Songs for the young to tickle their silly bone.

Mary C. Miller

Monday 1:00 p Clarendon

Releasing Your Inner Music

Denise Gendron

Monday 1:00 p Clarendon

Effective Self-Promotion

You've sold your book; now you want someone to buy it. Postcards or press releases, web sites or signings, radio waves or review copies -- what's the best way to bring fans to your book...and your book across the cash registers

Joshua Bilmes

Monday 1:00 p Dalton

The Fiction of Diana Gabaldon

Why is her "Outlander" series so popular? Fans discuss this SF/Romance crossover.

Sandra McDonald

Monday 1:00 p Exeter

Reading

Vera Nazarian

Monday 1:00 p Gardner

Challenges! (Sheila Oranch) (7-12)

Sheila Oranch

Monday 1:00 p Hampton

Reading

Mary Anne Mohanraj

Monday 1:00 p ConSuite

Kaffeeklatsch

Jay Caselberg, Walter H. Hunt, Les Johnson, Terry McGarry

Monday 1:30 p H209

Here is Greenwood [English]

Monday 1:30 p H210

The Gripe Session

Gripe, gripe, gripe...get over it, people! Do you know how much work went into this convention

Deb Geisler

Monday 1:30 p H307

Psychology of SF Fans

Michael Rennie

Monday 1:30 p Dalton

Start Your Own Museum

Thomas Atkinson, Don Sakers

Monday 1:30 p Exeter

Reading

David Marusek

Monday 1:30 p Hampton

Reading

Madeleine E. Robins

Monday 2:00 p H203

Teaching Science Fiction Online: Experiences with a Web-Only Class (Bill Dynes)

Monday 2:00 p H204

"For Us, the Living" and the Re-evaluation of Heinlein's Career (Bill Patterson, Robert James)

Monday 2:00 p H205

Future Health Problems

Well, sure, we're all getting old (and tired), but what kinds of health issues will that bring to us and society? Beyond that -- what new illnesses/syndromes might we see in a future where zero-G, annotated RNA, and alien contact (sexual and otherwise!) might be in store for us? Use your imagination to explore what the HMOs of the future might have to deal with.

Robert I. Katz (m), Shariann Lewitt, Karen Purcell, Samuel Scheiner

Monday 2:00 p H206

What's Your Agenda

How do you get your agendas in, and keep the story going strong? Do you really have to be a Mason to understand which character in the Magic Flute is the Catholic Church? How obvious should it be (or, does it matter?) before the story's believability is shot? How can writers (or readers?) avoid taking their preconceptions with them? Their backgrounds (life, beliefs, prejudices, obsessions) shape the tale after all, don't they

Benjamin Rosenbaum, Don Sakers (m), Martha Soukup, Carrie Vaughn

Monday 2:00 p H209

Here is Greenwood [English]

Monday 2:00 p H301

Deep Time

The far far (and we mean really far) future. What will the universe be like? Have any sf writers really tried to tackle this terrific time period

John G. Cramer, Mark L. Olson

Monday 2:00 p H303

Recent SF and Fantasy for Kids

Susan Fichtelberg, Diana Tixier Herald, Bonnie Kunzel

Monday 2:00 p H304

TV Storytelling: From Arcs to Episodes

Different TV series use different storytelling techniques. There's the series arc ("Babylon 5"), the episodic approach with occasional recurring themes (most of the "Star Treks"), the seasonal arc *"Buffy" and "Angel"), and the series arc which has no real conclusion in mind ("X Files"). The panel compares and discusses the various techniques used in telling stories on TV.

Michael A. Burstein, Craig Engler, Daniel Kimmel (m), Bey King, Melinda Snodgrass

Monday 2:00 p H305

Force Fields: what can electromagnetism do for us

What can electromagnetism do for us? Are there any other forces that might be used? How do new materials, potential superconductors, or ultra- fast computer reactions create new possibilities

Dave Clements, Howard Davidson (m), Jordin T. Kare, G. David Nordley

Monday 2:00 p H306

2024: technology that we can't imagine being without.

20 years ago it was hard to imagine what it was like before copy machines. They had changed a lot, and had gone quickly from being a novelty to such an essential part of business that nobody could imagine what it would be like if we didn't have them. The pace of such "essential" inventions has quickened. How did we ever get by without computers? The Web. VCRs. (Kids today -- and adults, since we've changed as we've gotten used to things -- can't imagine the days when you had to eagerly scan the TV listing for late-night movies, hoping that somebody would soon rerun the movie you hadn't seen in years or had always wanted to see.) And we're beginning to feel that way about our DVD players. What things that we don't have now will be considered so much a part of life that they'll fall into the "can't imagine life without them" category.

Kenn Bates, Marc Gordon (m), P. J. Plauger, Shara R. Zoll

Monday 2:00 p H307

When Fans Die...

...what happens to their stuff? It's depressing, but true. All of us have heard stories about a fan whose family executor, not knowing the value of his collection, threw it out upon his death. How do we prepare for the dispensation of our collections when we head for the Great Convention in the Sky? Sell it, even though it would break our hearts? Do we leave it to a library or university - however, won't they need an endowment to take care of it? It might end up sitting and rotting in the basement, until the books are sold for peanuts! Do we donate it to a fannish organization, to use as _they_ wish to advance SF? What areother alternatives? What are the advantages/disavantages/practicality of each

Andrew Porter, Mike Resnick, Joe Siclari (m)

Monday 2:00 p H309

SF Chick Flicks

So many SF films are about boys and their toys. What are the SF films with heart and soul? Are there any great SF "romances" that would really work on screen

Bob Devney, MaryAnn Johanson (m), John Pomeranz, John Scalzi

Monday 2:00 p H310

All I Learned about Science I Learned from SF

Like what? Is this a good thing or a bad thing? Can we trust the science in SF... do we want to

Jane Jewell, Steve Miller (m), Rebecca Moesta, Jo Walton

Monday 2:00 p H311

After the Fall

It's the end of the world...and civilization as we know it has collapsed. We all have different scenarios to what happens after - what's looking interesting these day? Explore this archetype of sf.

Elizabeth Bear, James Morrow, Nick Sagan, Mary Turzillo (m)

Monday 2:00 p H312

How Do You Know When You're Dead

The movie "The Sixth Sense" was not the first fiction to feature a character who is dead. Niven's Inferno, Connie Willis' Passages, and Philip Jose' Farmer's Riverworld series all have protagonists who are dead or die and continue to be featured players. What other fiction features dead people? (And we don't mean vampires - and why not?!) Are there any restrictions on the actions of dead people? What are some of the reactions of the characters who find themselves dead? Are there advantages to having a dead protagonist? Should we always fear the walking dead? What do they have to tell us? (Must we listen?) (Do they lie?) Do they return to harm or advise us? Do they come to warn or blame, comfort of prophesize? Do they offer us forgiveness or courage, or perhaps death itself? Discuss the use of the returning dead, and explain why they are such fascinating subjects.

Scott Edelman (m), Neil Gaiman, Larry Niven, Terry Pratchett, Uncle River, Connie Willis

Monday 2:00 p Art Show

Art Show Closes

Monday 2:00 p Mended Drum

Literary Beer

Josepha Sherman, Susan Shwartz

Monday 2:00 p Beacon A

Movie [ages 1-8]

Movies will be announced on the Movie Board outside the room.

Monday 2:00 p Beacon F

Bead a Necklace [ages 3-6]

We'll use elastic string and large beads to string a fun necklace.

Monday 2:00 p Clarendon

Emergent Cartoon Voices with Dave Grubbs

Monday 2:00 p Exeter

Reading

Daniel P. Dern

Monday 2:00 p Gardner

Scavenger Hunt Judging --- and Hogwart's Graduation? (7-12)

Scavenger Hunt Judging, Feedback time: How'd We Do? Any suggestions for next time

Monday 2:00 p Hall A

Registration Closes

Monday 2:00 p Hampton

Reading

Karen Traviss

Monday 2:30 p H204

Vanished Past and Vanishing Point (Zoe Trodd)

Proto-postmodernism, black holes, and the collective unconscious, and the science fictions of time, space, and Western history.

Monday 2:30 p H209

Catnapped [Subtitled] [3 +]

Monday 2:30 p H210

Filk Concert

Paul Estin

Monday 2:30 p Exeter

Reading

Stephen Leigh

Monday 3:00 p Auditorium

Closing Ceremonies

Our indomitable Guest of Honor and those N4 committeefolk not attacking the Art Show with vise grips stagger onstage to thank you all for coming. Then we hand over the gavel to the bravehearted optimists of next year's Worldcon, Interaction (in Glasgow, Scotland). If you're not too tired to stand, come on by and say bye-bye with us...

Deb Geisler, William Tenn, Terry Pratchett, Jack Speer, Peter Weston

Monday 3:00 p Auditorium

Closing Ceremony

Featuring the fife and drum band: Bostonia Allarum Companie

Monday 3:00 p ConCourse

Information Closes

Monday 3:00 p Hall D

Dealers Closes

Monday 4:00 p

Childcare Closes

Monday 4:00 p Glasgow,Scotland

Interthingy Begins

Monday 5:00 p Conference

Filk Office On-Call

Monday 7:00 p ConSuite

Dead Dog Party by Minneapolis in '73

Monday 8:00 p Clarendon

Open Filk

Monday 8:00 p Conference

Filk Office Re-opens

Monday 8:00 p Dalton

Open Filk - No taping

Monday 8:00 p Exeter

Open Filk

Monday 8:00 p Gardner

Open Filk

Monday 8:00 p Grand Ballroom

Lord of the Rings: Return of the King

Monday 8:00 p Hampton

Open Filk

Monday 11:00 p Conference

Filk Office Closes

Worldcon programs * * Wednesday & Thursday * * Friday * * Saturday * * Sunday * * Monday