Thanks
Credits All hail the Trufen of
NESFA! The New England
Compiled by Geri Sullivan Science Fiction Association
donated not just the use of Mr G,
their mimeo-in-a-box copyprinter,
but also the associated expenses
stencils, ink, maintenance, and the like.
Thanks to the club's generous support, Randy and I were able in turn to reallocate our hypothetical budgeted funds and mail more copies to fans near and far, especially to those overseas. A luxury indeed!
NESFA also provided the use of its clubhouse for our collation and mailing party, and NESFAns volunteered their ace printing and collating talents. Many hands...much fun.
Deb Geisler and Mike Benveniste gave a home-away-from-home to ye guest editor-publishers, saving us 150-mile daily roundtrips from and to Wales (the one in Massachusetts) for the printing/collating/mailing marathon during the last week of November. And there were sweetrolls!
Jeff Schalles is this issue's Saviour of the Paper. I donated 60+ cases of colored Fibertone to the St. Paul Art Scraps program when I sold Toad Hall in 2003 and moved east. Jeff offered to keep the white Fibertone specifically so it would be available for another issue of SFFY. He moved 100+ pounds of paper to his house, then to the house he and Marjorie moved to when they married in 2005. Then he managed to unearth it from the basement so it could be shipped east in a timely manner. What a trip!
Ken Fletcher, Peer G. Dudda, Magenta Griffith, David W. Schroth, Nate Bucklin, Sarah Brandel, Dan Goodman, Dean Gahlon, Felicia Herman, Rachel Rosenberg, Beth Friedman, Sharon Kahn, Martin Schafer, Steve Glennon, Eileen Lufkin, Judy Rosenberg, David Emerson, Erika Stark, Jeff Schalles, and Richard Tatge helped collate SFFY #11 and signed the Toad Hall Register so we'd remember the fact five years later. Some others helped out, too, no doubt
Thanks to all, and to all who found themselves putting the finishing touches on SFFY #12. Some of them don't even know it, such as the fine folk at NASA and STSc1. They provided the image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope that goes so well with the fourth and final haiku John Hertz wrote and Jae Leslie Adams lettered for SFFY. You think outer space looks good on Fibertone? You should see it on silk!
Data entry by Judy Bemis
Hard copy provided by Geri Sullivan
Updated March 25, 2008. If you have a comment about these web pages please send a note to the Fanac Webmaster. Thank you.