From LISTSERV@listserv.uic.edu Fri Jan 26 13:37:58 2001
Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2001 14:58:46 -0600
From: "L-Soft list server at UIC (1.8d)" <LISTSERV@listserv.uic.edu>
To: Laura Quilter <lquilter@FEMINISTSF.ORG>
Subject: File: "FEMINISTSF LOG0003A"

=========================================================================
Date:         Thu, 2 Mar 2000 16:59:50 -0800
Reply-To:     "For discussion of feminist SF, fantastic & utopian literature"
              <FEMINISTSF@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU>
Sender:       "For discussion of feminist SF, fantastic & utopian literature"
              <FEMINISTSF@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU>
From:         Laura M Quilter <lquilter@WENET.NET>
Subject:      LISTSERV list archives to be pruned on Mar 31 (fwd)
Comments: To: feministsf@uic.edu, feministsf-lit@uic.edu
MIME-Version: 1.0
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so -- the only archives that will exist will be on the web site.  i've got
all the ones older than a year, but will go ahead & update now.

Laura Quilter / lquilter@wenet.net

"If I can't dance, I don't want to be
in your revolution."  -- Emma Goldman

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 02 Mar 2000 16:16:09 -0600
From: ACCC Operating Systems Group <systems@UIC.EDU>
To: all-request@listserv.uic.edu
Cc: sysgrp@UIC.EDU
Subject: LISTSERV list archives to be pruned on Mar 31

Hello list owner:

On March 31 all Listserv list archives which are older
than 1 year will be erased.

This must be done on March 31 to conserve disk space
and it will done again periodically after that.  We'll strive
to keep archives that are less than a year old online.

This policy is documented on our Listserv list creation
page on the web. If you wish to preserve your old list
archives you must get them from Listserv and store them
on your own machine or in your personal file space,
and you must do this before March 31.

For Listserv some brief documentation can be found on the
web at the ACCC home page: http://www.uic.edu/depts/accc,
and complete documentation can be found on the web at the
Lsoft home page: http://www.lsoft.com/manuals/.

ACCC Systems
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Date:         Fri, 3 Mar 2000 10:32:28 -0600
Reply-To:     "For discussion of feminist SF, fantastic & utopian literature"
              <FEMINISTSF@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU>
Sender:       "For discussion of feminist SF, fantastic & utopian literature"
              <FEMINISTSF@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU>
From:         Todd Mason <Todd.Mason@TVGUIDE.COM>
Subject:      Some web-radio links for Drama, and two abbreviated blurbs
Comments: cc: SF-LIT@RS8.LOC.GOV
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http://www.mtn.org/~jstearns/Radiodrama.html

http://www.irdp.co.uk/page8.htm

BLURB ONE:

BEYOND 2000 STORY LIST AND HOW TO GET IT IN YOUR AREA
                 Harlan's new NPR radio show starts in
April, so it's time to make sure you can get it! Check
out
                 http://www.npr.org/members to get
your local contact information, then call your station
and let them
                 know you want them to broadcast the
show. It costs them nothing to get the show, but they
won't
                 broadcast it unless they know people
want to hear it!

                 Here is a list of the stories that
are planned for the series (*=Harlan is part of cast):
                 Hans Christian Anderson, In A
Thousand Years
                 Isaac Asimov, Nightfall, adapted by
Yuri Rasovsky
                 Stephen Vincent Benét, By The Waters
Of Babylon, adapted by Yuri Rasovsky
                 Ray Bradbury, Pillar of Fire, adapted
by Dennis Etchison
                 Fredric Brown, Knock, adapted by Yuri
Rasovsky
                 Karel Capek, R.U.R., adapted by Yuri
Rasovsky
                 Terry Dowling, The Only Bird in Her
Name, adapted by Yuri Rasovsky
                 Friedrich Dürrenmatt, The Mission of
The Vega, adapted by Yuri Rasovsky
                 *Harlan Ellison, 'Repent, Harlequin!'
Said the Ticktockman, adapted by Harlan Ellison & Yuri
                 Rasovsky

BLURB TWO:

SELECTED SHORTS with Isaiah Sheffer     NOON-1PM (today on WHYY-FM 90.9 in
Philadelphia)

>From Symphony Space in New York City, hear marvelous short stories read by
actors and actresses from the American stage and screen.  This week: Jim
Thompson's "Forever After," from, The Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction, edited
by Maxim Jakubowski and read by Ivy Austin.  Also, Donald Barthelme's "At
the End of the Mechanical Age," from 60 Stories (Penguin) and read by
Roscoe Lee Browne.
=========================================================================
Date:         Tue, 7 Mar 2000 11:50:48 -0800
Reply-To:     "For discussion of feminist SF, fantastic & utopian literature"
              <FEMINISTSF@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU>
Sender:       "For discussion of feminist SF, fantastic & utopian literature"
              <FEMINISTSF@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU>
From:         Freddie Baer <fbaer@WESTED.ORG>
Subject:      1999 James Tiptree Jr Memorial Award
Comments: To: FEMINISTSF-LIT@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

The 1999 James Tiptree Jr. Memorial Award has been announced:

Suzy McKee Charnas's _The Conqueror's Child_ has won the 1999 James
Tiptree Jr. Memorial Award.

The short list (in alphabetical order, by author):

If I Told You Once (Judy Budnitz)
"In the Second Person" (Sally Caves)
"Pinkland" (Graham Joyce)
The Woman with the Flying Head (Yumiko Kurahashi)
"5001 Nights" (Penelope Lively)
The Iron Bridge (David E. Morse)
"Sexual Dimorphism" (Kim Stanley Robinson)

The long list (in alphabetical order, by author):

"The Actors" and "Dapple" (Eleanor Arnason)
A Civil Campaign (Lois McMaster Bujold)
Silver Birch/Blood Moon (ed. Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling)
"Remailer" (Debra Doyle and James D. MacDonald)
Teranesia (Greg Egan)
The Vintner's Luck (Elizabeth Knox)
"Dragonfly" (Ursula K. Le Guin)
Speaking Stones (Stephen Leigh)
The Terrorists of Irustan (Louise Marley)
The Singer from the Sea (Sherri S. Tepper)

Timmi Duchamp, on behalf of the jury (Bill Clemente, L. Timmel
Duchamp,
Kelly Link, and Diane Martin [chair])
