Difference between revisions of "David Hulan"
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'''David G. “Dave” Hulan''', a [[fan]] who was born and grew up in [[Alabama]], worked in [[Huntsville]] at the Redstone Arsenal there through the early ’60s and moved to the [[LA area]] sometime in 1964-65. | '''David G. “Dave” Hulan''', a [[fan]] who was born and grew up in [[Alabama]], worked in [[Huntsville]] at the Redstone Arsenal there through the early ’60s and moved to the [[LA area]] sometime in 1964-65. | ||
− | He [[chaired]] the first [[DeepSouthCon]] (and hosted it with his first wife, [[Katya Hulan]], in their home -- there were only five other people there) in 1963. He was a member of the [[N3F]], [[SFG]], and [[ISFCC]]. He was the US administrator for [[Operation Andy Capp]]. He was one of the founding members of [[SFPA]]. | + | He [[chaired]] the first [[DeepSouthCon]] (and hosted it with his first wife, [[Katya Hulan]], in their home -- there were only five other people there) in 1963. He was a member of the [[N3F]], [[SFG]], [[APA-L]], and [[ISFCC]]. He was the US administrator for [[Operation Andy Capp]]. He was one of the founding members of [[SFPA]]. |
Once in [[LA]], he joined [[LASFS]]. Along with [[Ed Cox]], he founded the [[APA]] [[Stobcler]] in 1965. He chaired [[Westercon 25]] in 1972. He was responsible for starting the [[Ellik-Jacobs Memorial Wine & Cheese Party]] in 1968. He was a member of [[The Petards]] and an early and active member of the [[Mythopoeic Society]]. He was a member of [[APANAGE]], [[SFPA]] (of which he served as [[OE]]), [[FAPA]], and [[Gestalt]]. | Once in [[LA]], he joined [[LASFS]]. Along with [[Ed Cox]], he founded the [[APA]] [[Stobcler]] in 1965. He chaired [[Westercon 25]] in 1972. He was responsible for starting the [[Ellik-Jacobs Memorial Wine & Cheese Party]] in 1968. He was a member of [[The Petards]] and an early and active member of the [[Mythopoeic Society]]. He was a member of [[APANAGE]], [[SFPA]] (of which he served as [[OE]]), [[FAPA]], and [[Gestalt]]. | ||
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* ''[[The High Aesthetic Line]]'' (for [[SFPA]]) | * ''[[The High Aesthetic Line]]'' (for [[SFPA]]) | ||
* ''[[The Mything Link]]'' | * ''[[The Mything Link]]'' | ||
+ | * ''[[Niddhoggr]]'' (for [[APA-L]]) | ||
* ''[[Niflheim]]'' (for [[SAPS]]) | * ''[[Niflheim]]'' (for [[SAPS]]) | ||
* ''[[Pelf]]'' (with [[Dave Locke]]) | * ''[[Pelf]]'' (with [[Dave Locke]]) |
Latest revision as of 05:28, 24 July 2024
(December 18, 1936 –)
David G. “Dave” Hulan, a fan who was born and grew up in Alabama, worked in Huntsville at the Redstone Arsenal there through the early ’60s and moved to the LA area sometime in 1964-65.
He chaired the first DeepSouthCon (and hosted it with his first wife, Katya Hulan, in their home -- there were only five other people there) in 1963. He was a member of the N3F, SFG, APA-L, and ISFCC. He was the US administrator for Operation Andy Capp. He was one of the founding members of SFPA.
Once in LA, he joined LASFS. Along with Ed Cox, he founded the APA Stobcler in 1965. He chaired Westercon 25 in 1972. He was responsible for starting the Ellik-Jacobs Memorial Wine & Cheese Party in 1968. He was a member of The Petards and an early and active member of the Mythopoeic Society. He was a member of APANAGE, SFPA (of which he served as OE), FAPA, and Gestalt.
After a career as an optical engineer in the aerospace industry, he retired in 1996 and moved to Naperville, IL. He was married to Katya Hulan in the 1960s and now to Marcia Hulan.
- Auslander (with Ed Cox)
- Campaign Trail (for SFPA)
- Early English
- Fenris
- IscarioT (with Al Andrews for SFPA)
- Loki (for SFPA, SAPS, and FAPA at various times)
- The High Aesthetic Line (for SFPA)
- The Mything Link
- Niddhoggr (for APA-L)
- Niflheim (for SAPS)
- Pelf (with Dave Locke)
- Purple from Orange ]1970s] (for FAPA)
- Sudri
- Tightbeam (some issues)
- Utgard (for SFPA)
- Why Bother? (for FAPA)
Awards, Honors and GoHships:
- 1966 -- Rebel Award
- 2012 -- DeepSouthCon 50
Person | 1936— |
This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names. |