Difference between revisions of "Minn-StF"

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[[File:Minn-StF Logo.jpg|thumb]]
The '''Minnesota Science Fiction Society''' – '''Minn-stf''' or *MnStf''' for short (it was originally the '''Minnesota [[Scientifiction]] Society''') – came formally into being on November 25, 1966 at the ''Minnesota Techolog'' office at the University of Minnesota (or, possibly, at [[Frank Stodolka]]'s parent's house -- sources differ on the location, but not the date.)  (See [[Minneapolis]] for some pre-Minn-StF organizational details.)
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The '''Minnesota Science Fiction Society''' – '''Minn-stf''' or '''MnStf''' for short (it was originally the '''Minnesota [[Scientifiction]] Society''') – came formally into being on November 25, 1966 at the ''Minnesota Techolog'' office at the University of Minnesota (or, possibly, at [[Frank Stodolka]]'s parent's house -- sources differ on the location, but not the date.)  (See [[Minneapolis]] for some pre-Minn-StF organizational details.)
 
 
The [[Floundering Fathers]] were [[Ken Fletcher]], [[Nate Bucklin]], [[Frank Stodolka]] (who was elected first president), [[Jim Young]], and [[Fred Haskell]] (who later claimed he was actually out getting a sandwich at the time).
 
  
 
When MnStf outgrew the ''Technolog'' offices, it met at Golub's Bookstore and then at the Pillsbury-Waite Cultural Center, but eventually found its permanent home at members' houses.  Other early members included [[Linda Lounsbury]], [[Floyd Henderson]], [[Richard Tatge]], and [[Al Kuhfeld]].
 
When MnStf outgrew the ''Technolog'' offices, it met at Golub's Bookstore and then at the Pillsbury-Waite Cultural Center, but eventually found its permanent home at members' houses.  Other early members included [[Linda Lounsbury]], [[Floyd Henderson]], [[Richard Tatge]], and [[Al Kuhfeld]].
  
Known as Crazy Minneapolis Fandom through the 70s and into the 80s, the club met every other week for decades and it now meets twice a month in members' homes. The club sponsors the annual [[Minicon (Minneapolis) |Minicon]] on Easter weekend. Minn-stf's spirit was perhaps best described by [[Patrick Nielsen Hayden]], who observed, "There are three [[fannish]] centers in the country – [[Boston]], [[Los Angeles]] and [[Minneapolis]]. [[Boston]] is Law, [[Los Angeles]] is Chaos and [[Minneapolis]] is Faerie."
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Known as Crazy Minneapolis Fandom through the 70s and into the 80s, the club met every other week for decades and it now meets twice a month in members' homes. The club sponsors the annual [[Minicon (MN) |Minicon]] on Easter weekend. Minn-stf's spirit was perhaps best described by [[Patrick Nielsen Hayden]], who observed, "There are three [[fannish]] centers in the country – [[Boston]], [[Los Angeles]] and [[Minneapolis]]. [[Boston]] is Law, [[Los Angeles]] is Chaos and [[Minneapolis]] is Faerie."
  
 
Minn-StF (historically sometimes pronounced "Minn-stef", but now almost always "Minn-stiff") is dedicated to furthering the appreciation of [[science fiction]] and [[fantasy]] literature. Minn-StF's "meetings" are actually parties. The traditional start time for a Minn-StF meeting is 2pm, but most people don't show up 'til 4pm or so unless the "meeting" is a picnic or pool party.
 
Minn-StF (historically sometimes pronounced "Minn-stef", but now almost always "Minn-stiff") is dedicated to furthering the appreciation of [[science fiction]] and [[fantasy]] literature. Minn-StF's "meetings" are actually parties. The traditional start time for a Minn-StF meeting is 2pm, but most people don't show up 'til 4pm or so unless the "meeting" is a picnic or pool party.
  
''[[Einblatt!]]'' is the [[clubzine]] which is mainly a calendar of events.  ''[[Rune]]'' is the very sporadic [[club]] [[fanzine]]. (There was a ten year gap between ''Rune 86'', published in March 2002, and ''Rune 87'', dated October 2012.)  Minn-Stf also publishes a fiction [[fanzine]] named ''[[Tales of the Unanticipated]]''.
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''[[Einblatt!]]'' is the [[clubzine]] which is mainly a calendar of events.  ''[[Rune]]'' is the very sporadic [[club]] [[genzine]]. (There was a ten year gap between ''Rune 86'', published in March 2002, and ''Rune 87'', dated October 2012.)  Minn-Stf also publishes a fiction [[fanzine]] named ''[[Tales of the Unanticipated]]''.
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In addition to [[Minicon (MN) |Minicon]] (a [[regional]]), Minn-StF usually runs a [[fallcon]], a [[relaxacon]] which is currently named [[METHOD Con]], (but the name changes frequently), the [[Minneapolis in '73]], a not-a-[[hoax bid]] [[Worldcon bid]], and the [[Minneapolis in 2073]] [[Worldcon bid]].
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Minn-StF is officially agnostic when it comes to spelling, hyphenating, capitalizing the club's nickname. '''Minn-StF, MNstf, Minn-stf''', and other variations are all acceptable. The "[[StF]]" came from "[[scientifiction]]."
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[https://mnstf.org/ Website.]
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===Floundering Fathers===
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The founders of [[Minnstf]]  were [[Ken Fletcher]] ([[Treasurer]]), [[Nate Bucklin]] ([[Secretary]]), [[Frank Stodolka]] (who was elected first [[president]]), [[Jim Young]], and [[Fred Haskell]] (who claimed he was actually out getting a sandwich at the time).  Haskell was elected Official Happy [[Deadwood]], over his protests that a [[club]] needs members, too.
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==Rune Press==
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The Minn-Stf [[publishing house]] and [[small press]] which is responsible for ''[[Rune]]'' itself, ''[[Einblatt!]]'', as well as the first 23 issues of ''[[Tales of the Unanticipated]]''.  Additionally, it published a number of small books:
  
In addition to [[Minicon (Minneapolis) |Minicon]] (a [[regional]]), Minn-StF usually runs a [[fallcon]], a [[relaxacon]] which is currently named [[METHOD Con]], (but the name changes frequently), the [[Minneapolis in '73]], a not-a-[[hoax bid]] [[Worldcon bid]], and the [[Minneapolis in 2073]] [[Worldcon bid]].
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<tab head=top>
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Year || Book || Author || Notes
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1979 ||''Maturity'' ||[[Theodore Sturgeon]] ||A short story collection and [[bibliography]] published for [[Minicon 15]]  
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1985 ||''Time Gum'' ||ed [[Eleanor Arnason]] and [[Terry A. Garey]] ||A [[speculative poetry]] anthology
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1988 ||''Time Frames'' ||ed [[Terry A. Garey]] ||A [[speculative poetry]] anthology
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</tab>
  
Minn-StF is officially agnostic when it comes to spelling, hyphenating, capitalizing the club's nickname. Minn-StF, MNstf, Minn-stf, and other variations are all acceptable. The "StF" came from "scientifiction."
 
  
{{club | website=https://mnstf.org | files=http://files.fancyclopedia.org/Minn-StF | start=1966 | end=}}
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{{club | start=1966 | end=}}
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]

Revision as of 03:41, 11 March 2021

Minn-StF Logo.jpg

The Minnesota Science Fiction SocietyMinn-stf or MnStf for short (it was originally the Minnesota Scientifiction Society) – came formally into being on November 25, 1966 at the Minnesota Techolog office at the University of Minnesota (or, possibly, at Frank Stodolka's parent's house -- sources differ on the location, but not the date.) (See Minneapolis for some pre-Minn-StF organizational details.)

When MnStf outgrew the Technolog offices, it met at Golub's Bookstore and then at the Pillsbury-Waite Cultural Center, but eventually found its permanent home at members' houses. Other early members included Linda Lounsbury, Floyd Henderson, Richard Tatge, and Al Kuhfeld.

Known as Crazy Minneapolis Fandom through the 70s and into the 80s, the club met every other week for decades and it now meets twice a month in members' homes. The club sponsors the annual Minicon on Easter weekend. Minn-stf's spirit was perhaps best described by Patrick Nielsen Hayden, who observed, "There are three fannish centers in the country – Boston, Los Angeles and Minneapolis. Boston is Law, Los Angeles is Chaos and Minneapolis is Faerie."

Minn-StF (historically sometimes pronounced "Minn-stef", but now almost always "Minn-stiff") is dedicated to furthering the appreciation of science fiction and fantasy literature. Minn-StF's "meetings" are actually parties. The traditional start time for a Minn-StF meeting is 2pm, but most people don't show up 'til 4pm or so unless the "meeting" is a picnic or pool party.

Einblatt! is the clubzine which is mainly a calendar of events. Rune is the very sporadic club genzine. (There was a ten year gap between Rune 86, published in March 2002, and Rune 87, dated October 2012.) Minn-Stf also publishes a fiction fanzine named Tales of the Unanticipated.

In addition to Minicon (a regional), Minn-StF usually runs a fallcon, a relaxacon which is currently named METHOD Con, (but the name changes frequently), the Minneapolis in '73, a not-a-hoax bid Worldcon bid, and the Minneapolis in 2073 Worldcon bid.

Minn-StF is officially agnostic when it comes to spelling, hyphenating, capitalizing the club's nickname. Minn-StF, MNstf, Minn-stf, and other variations are all acceptable. The "StF" came from "scientifiction."

Website.

Floundering Fathers[edit]

The founders of Minnstf were Ken Fletcher (Treasurer), Nate Bucklin (Secretary), Frank Stodolka (who was elected first president), Jim Young, and Fred Haskell (who claimed he was actually out getting a sandwich at the time). Haskell was elected Official Happy Deadwood, over his protests that a club needs members, too.

Rune Press[edit]

The Minn-Stf publishing house and small press which is responsible for Rune itself, Einblatt!, as well as the first 23 issues of Tales of the Unanticipated. Additionally, it published a number of small books:

Year Book Author Notes
1979 Maturity Theodore Sturgeon A short story collection and bibliography published for Minicon 15
1985 Time Gum ed Eleanor Arnason and Terry A. Garey A speculative poetry anthology
1988 Time Frames ed Terry A. Garey A speculative poetry anthology



Club 1966
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!