Difference between revisions of "Midwestcon 19"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Bot: Adding Category:US)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Midwestcon]] 19 was held June 29-30, 1968 at the North Plaza Motel in [[Cincinnati]].    It was a "a pleasant weekend of fun, fresh air, and water" with "the swimming pool was apparently the GoH, as there were pool parties all weekend, at all hours of the day and night".  Attendance was 225. [[Worldcon bidders]] from [[Columbus in '69]]  and [[St. Louis in '69]] were highly visible with their bid parties.  In addition, there were contingents from [[Pittsburgh]], [[Boston]], and [[New York]] as well.
+
[[Midwestcon]] 19 was held June 29-30, 1968 at the North Plaza Motel in [[Cincinnati, OH]].    It was a "a pleasant weekend of fun, fresh air, and water" with "the swimming pool was apparently the GoH, as there were pool parties all weekend, at all hours of the day and night".  Attendance was 225. [[Worldcon bidders]] from [[Columbus in '69]]  and [[St. Louis in '69]] were highly visible with their bid parties.  In addition, there were contingents from [[Pittsburgh]], [[Boston]], and [[New York]] as well.
  
 
[[Midwestcon]] lived up to its reputation as a meeting place for fans of all regions and eras, with old-timers such as [[Dave Kyle]], [[Bob Tucker]], [[Lee Hoffman]], and [[Fritz Leiber]] and relaive newcomers such as [[Ted White]], [[Jay Kay Klein]], [[Alexei Panshin]], and [[Earl Kemp]].
 
[[Midwestcon]] lived up to its reputation as a meeting place for fans of all regions and eras, with old-timers such as [[Dave Kyle]], [[Bob Tucker]], [[Lee Hoffman]], and [[Fritz Leiber]] and relaive newcomers such as [[Ted White]], [[Jay Kay Klein]], [[Alexei Panshin]], and [[Earl Kemp]].
Line 5: Line 5:
 
The only event of the convention was the usual [[banquet]] on Saturday night (which nearly everyone at the convention attended), which included a mind-reading act, a short speech by [[Tucker]] and a very long series of introductions of all the notables who were there.  According to ''[[Locus]]'', there was "an immense number of people peddling an even more immense number of [[fanzines]]".
 
The only event of the convention was the usual [[banquet]] on Saturday night (which nearly everyone at the convention attended), which included a mind-reading act, a short speech by [[Tucker]] and a very long series of introductions of all the notables who were there.  According to ''[[Locus]]'', there was "an immense number of people peddling an even more immense number of [[fanzines]]".
  
There was a [[con report]] in the August 1968 issue of ''[[Science Fiction Times]]''.
+
* {{conpubs |series=Midwestcon |con={{PAGENAME}}}}
 +
* There was a [[con report]] in the August 1968 issue of ''[[Science Fiction Times]]''
 +
* Brief con report in ''[[OSFAn]] #38'' p2
  
{{convention | series=Midwestcon | year=1968 | before=Midwestcon 18 | after=Midwestcon 20}}
+
{{convention | series=Midwestcon | year=1968 | before=Midwestcon 18 | after=Midwestcon 20 |Locale=Cincinnati, OH}}
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]

Latest revision as of 12:47, 29 May 2024

Midwestcon 19 was held June 29-30, 1968 at the North Plaza Motel in Cincinnati, OH. It was a "a pleasant weekend of fun, fresh air, and water" with "the swimming pool was apparently the GoH, as there were pool parties all weekend, at all hours of the day and night". Attendance was 225. Worldcon bidders from Columbus in '69 and St. Louis in '69 were highly visible with their bid parties. In addition, there were contingents from Pittsburgh, Boston, and New York as well.

Midwestcon lived up to its reputation as a meeting place for fans of all regions and eras, with old-timers such as Dave Kyle, Bob Tucker, Lee Hoffman, and Fritz Leiber and relaive newcomers such as Ted White, Jay Kay Klein, Alexei Panshin, and Earl Kemp.

The only event of the convention was the usual banquet on Saturday night (which nearly everyone at the convention attended), which included a mind-reading act, a short speech by Tucker and a very long series of introductions of all the notables who were there. According to Locus, there was "an immense number of people peddling an even more immense number of fanzines".


Midwestcon 18 Midwestcon Midwestcon 20
1968
This is a convention page. Please extend it by adding information about the convention, including dates, GoHs, convention chairman, locale, sponsoring organization, external links to convention pages, awards given, the program, notable events, anecdotes, pictures, scans of publications, pictures of T-shirts, con reports, etc.