Difference between revisions of "Ann Arbor Science Fiction Association"
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− | The '''AASFA''' is a nonprofit corporation founded by the [[Stilyagi Air Corps]] in | + | The '''AASFA''' is a nonprofit corporation founded by members of the [[Stilyagi Air Corps]] in 1978 to be the official sponsor of [[ConFusion|ConFusion]] after the [[concom]] began to include grown-ups with houses and other assets to lose if the January [[con]] were sued or bankrupted by a blizzard. |
− | The | + | The founding board of directors were [[Nancy Tucker Shaw|Nancy Tucker]], [[Larry Tucker]], [[Jean Barnard]] and [[Leah Zeldes]], who were then principal members of the ConFusion [[concom]]. |
By that time, the [[Stilyagi Air Corps]], though still nominally a University of Michigan [[club]], had only token student membership. Interested members of the [[club]] remained extensively involved with the con, electing its chairman and choosing its [[gohs]]; however, the AASFA board made financial decisions, typically conservative ones (maintaining a blizzard fund, for example). | By that time, the [[Stilyagi Air Corps]], though still nominally a University of Michigan [[club]], had only token student membership. Interested members of the [[club]] remained extensively involved with the con, electing its chairman and choosing its [[gohs]]; however, the AASFA board made financial decisions, typically conservative ones (maintaining a blizzard fund, for example). | ||
− | Trouble was brewing. The Stilyagi Air Corps prided itself on being informal -- "spontaneous" -- and very 70s and had no particularly clear rules nor in any case paid what rules it had much attention. (Hence the need for adult supervision in the guise of the AASFA | + | Trouble was brewing. The Stilyagi Air Corps prided itself on being informal -- "spontaneous" -- and very 70s and had no particularly clear rules nor in any case paid what rules it had much attention. (Hence the need for adult supervision in the guise of the AASFA.) In particular, two of the the SAC's traditions combined to trigger a confrontation: First, anyone who ever attended an SAC meeting was a member for life and, secondly, any member could provide a proxy for voting at meetings. |
− | The selection of [[ConFusion | + | The selection of [[ConFusion|ConFusion]] Guests of Honor and -- most importantly -- the convention's [[chairman]] was the result of an election where a significant number of votes were by proxy from people who no longer participated in the club, but were willing to provide their proxies. Proxy wars ensued and after [[Tara Edwards]] defeated [[Nancy Tucker]] to chair another Confusion, the AASFA acted to remove the SAC from control of ConFusion. |
There was further confusion (the condition, not the convention) over the role in all this of [[Waldo and Magic Inc.]], a club in neighboring Ypsilanti, and of the [[Southern Michigan Organization of Fans]], which was bidding for [[Detroit in '85]]. | There was further confusion (the condition, not the convention) over the role in all this of [[Waldo and Magic Inc.]], a club in neighboring Ypsilanti, and of the [[Southern Michigan Organization of Fans]], which was bidding for [[Detroit in '85]]. | ||
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See {{file770 | issue=39 | page=1}} for a long article summarizing events through the Spring of 1983 and {{file770 | issue=41}} p7 for the next installment. The settlement is reported in ''[[File 770]] #42'' p4. | See {{file770 | issue=39 | page=1}} for a long article summarizing events through the Spring of 1983 and {{file770 | issue=41}} p7 for the next installment. The settlement is reported in ''[[File 770]] #42'' p4. | ||
− | In 1983, a minority of members of the club, unhappy with those decisions and [[committee]] assignments made by duly elected con [[chairman]] [[Nancy Tucker]], whom they had been unable to unseat, used the university affiliation to disenfranchise many nonstudent members and force a Stilyagi vs. AASFA lawsuit over control of the AASFA funds and the convention, [[all fandom was plunged into war|plunging all Ann Arbor fandom into war]]. Larry, whose life basically revolved around Stilyagi and ConFusion, was devastated; Leah was in any case moving away; and Nancy and Jean were disheartened. So the lawsuit concluded with an out-of-court settlement, giving all control of the con to the Stilyagi plaintiffs as of 1985, and left much bitter feeling. | + | In 1983, a minority of members of the club, unhappy with those decisions and [[committee]] assignments made by duly elected con [[chairman]] [[Nancy Tucker]], whom they had been unable to unseat, used the university affiliation to disenfranchise many nonstudent members and force a Stilyagi vs. AASFA [[lawsuit]] over control of the AASFA funds and the convention, [[all fandom was plunged into war|plunging all Ann Arbor fandom into war]]. Larry, whose life basically revolved around Stilyagi and ConFusion, was devastated; Leah was in any case moving away; and Nancy and Jean were disheartened. So the lawsuit concluded with an out-of-court settlement, giving all control of the con to the Stilyagi plaintiffs as of 1985, and left much bitter feeling. |
However, in a few years, things changed. Larry was named [[fan GoH]] in 1988; Leah, who had moved away soon after the settlement, was invited as [[fgoh]] in 1994, and Nancy in 1999. | However, in a few years, things changed. Larry was named [[fan GoH]] in 1988; Leah, who had moved away soon after the settlement, was invited as [[fgoh]] in 1994, and Nancy in 1999. | ||
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In the 2000s, Stilyagi chose to put ConFusion under the control of a reconstituted AASFA, which now has a self-electing board of directors, and no legal obligations to Stilyagi. The relationship between [[concom]], club and corporation seems complicated. AASFA's website says: "AASFA provides guidance and support to the convention, and appoints the ConChair every year." The Stilyagi website confusingly (!) conflates the two organizations, but presents separate bylaws. | In the 2000s, Stilyagi chose to put ConFusion under the control of a reconstituted AASFA, which now has a self-electing board of directors, and no legal obligations to Stilyagi. The relationship between [[concom]], club and corporation seems complicated. AASFA's website says: "AASFA provides guidance and support to the convention, and appoints the ConChair every year." The Stilyagi website confusingly (!) conflates the two organizations, but presents separate bylaws. | ||
− | {{club | website= | + | {{club | website=https://www.aasfa.org | start=1970s}} |
[[Category:feud]] | [[Category:feud]] | ||
− | |||
[[Category:US]] | [[Category:US]] |
Latest revision as of 11:33, 28 November 2022
The AASFA is a nonprofit corporation founded by members of the Stilyagi Air Corps in 1978 to be the official sponsor of ConFusion after the concom began to include grown-ups with houses and other assets to lose if the January con were sued or bankrupted by a blizzard.
The founding board of directors were Nancy Tucker, Larry Tucker, Jean Barnard and Leah Zeldes, who were then principal members of the ConFusion concom.
By that time, the Stilyagi Air Corps, though still nominally a University of Michigan club, had only token student membership. Interested members of the club remained extensively involved with the con, electing its chairman and choosing its gohs; however, the AASFA board made financial decisions, typically conservative ones (maintaining a blizzard fund, for example).
Trouble was brewing. The Stilyagi Air Corps prided itself on being informal -- "spontaneous" -- and very 70s and had no particularly clear rules nor in any case paid what rules it had much attention. (Hence the need for adult supervision in the guise of the AASFA.) In particular, two of the the SAC's traditions combined to trigger a confrontation: First, anyone who ever attended an SAC meeting was a member for life and, secondly, any member could provide a proxy for voting at meetings.
The selection of ConFusion Guests of Honor and -- most importantly -- the convention's chairman was the result of an election where a significant number of votes were by proxy from people who no longer participated in the club, but were willing to provide their proxies. Proxy wars ensued and after Tara Edwards defeated Nancy Tucker to chair another Confusion, the AASFA acted to remove the SAC from control of ConFusion.
There was further confusion (the condition, not the convention) over the role in all this of Waldo and Magic Inc., a club in neighboring Ypsilanti, and of the Southern Michigan Organization of Fans, which was bidding for Detroit in '85.
See File 770 39, p. 1 for a long article summarizing events through the Spring of 1983 and File 770 41, p. 2 p7 for the next installment. The settlement is reported in File 770 #42 p4.
In 1983, a minority of members of the club, unhappy with those decisions and committee assignments made by duly elected con chairman Nancy Tucker, whom they had been unable to unseat, used the university affiliation to disenfranchise many nonstudent members and force a Stilyagi vs. AASFA lawsuit over control of the AASFA funds and the convention, plunging all Ann Arbor fandom into war. Larry, whose life basically revolved around Stilyagi and ConFusion, was devastated; Leah was in any case moving away; and Nancy and Jean were disheartened. So the lawsuit concluded with an out-of-court settlement, giving all control of the con to the Stilyagi plaintiffs as of 1985, and left much bitter feeling.
However, in a few years, things changed. Larry was named fan GoH in 1988; Leah, who had moved away soon after the settlement, was invited as fgoh in 1994, and Nancy in 1999.
In the 2000s, Stilyagi chose to put ConFusion under the control of a reconstituted AASFA, which now has a self-electing board of directors, and no legal obligations to Stilyagi. The relationship between concom, club and corporation seems complicated. AASFA's website says: "AASFA provides guidance and support to the convention, and appoints the ConChair every year." The Stilyagi website confusingly (!) conflates the two organizations, but presents separate bylaws.
Club | Website | 1970s— |
This is a club page. Please extend it by adding information about when and where the club met, when and by whom it was founded, how long it was active, notable accomplishments, well-known members, clubzines, any conventions it ran, external links to the club's website, other club pages, etc.
When there's a floreat (Fl.), this indicates the time or times for which we have found evidence that the club existed. This is probably not going to represent the club's full lifetime, so please update it if you can! |