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Scientifictionist, issue 2, 1945
Page 13
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David Charles -- FINANCE -- #6 September 43 An even neater explanation of the depression than the story AMAZING ran a bit over a decade ago explaining the disastrous Japanese earthquakes. Hal Clement (Harry Stubbs) -- 1st prize -- AVENUE OF ESCAPE -- #4 November 42 For those who can walk fast enough, the full 160 feet between machine gun bullets is plenty of room; no? George E. Dale -- TIME PUSSY -- #1 April 42 Proving it is dangerous to digest your food before you eat it. William M. Danner -- TRUE FIDELITY -- #5 December 42 Maybe it was radio transmission of matter and maybe it wasn't. See Harry Bates' FAREWELL TO THE MASTER (Oct. 40 ASF) and Anthony Gilmore's THE RETURN OF HAWK CARSE (July 42 AMAZING) Charles Ben Davis -- 3rd prize -- YOU SAID IT! -- #8 September 43 Erasmus Turp changes fancy to fact with his electroscamboic Cliche Vitalizer. Lyon Sprague de Camp -- SOME CURIOUS EFFECTS OF TIME TRAVEL -- #1 April 42 Chronomobiles are dangerous because age is inseparable from time. -- 2nd prize -- THE ANECDOTE OF THE NEGATIVE WUGUG -- #3 August 42 If anyone cares to figure out how much $1,000,000 x 2 (to the 450th power) is, just let me know. -- 2nd prize -- THE ANECDOTE OF THE MOVABLE EARS -- #6 February 43 Wherein de Camp pretends he's a mouse. Gordon Garrett -- 2nd prize -- THE ABSENCE OF HEAT -- #10 June 44 It was either Polaris XIV or the galaxy. So naturally -- Joseph Gilbert -- 3rd prize -- DESTINY AND UNCLE LOUIE -- #3 August 42 Harder to find suitable comments for than de Camp's three efforts. Randall Hale -- DE GUSTIBUS -- #2 July 42 Even salt is made of poisonous chlorine and sodium -- with that for inspiration what might not a starving man concoct? George W. Hall -- 1st prize -- APPLESAUCE -- #12 December 44 QZZZ-OOO 1/2 is stuck with the part apples have played in Tellurian history. H. Orlo Hoadley -- 1st prize -- PICTURE FROM TOKYO -- #9 January 44 This was Hoadley's second effort; his first (which may have appeared under his pen name, James B. Harlow) was PRECIOUS AIR and appeared in Microcosmos. Frank Holby -- THE STRANGE CASE OF THE MISSING HERO -- #2 July 42 Just a tighter circle than SUTTON'S STRANGE VOYAGE by James Norman (May 42 Az) -- THE THIRTY-FIRST OF JUNE -- #11 September 44 One of those International Date Line mixups Fox B. Holden -- NOISE IS BEAUTIFUL! -- #6 February 43 Same idea as Walter A. Coole's A SURGICAL ERROR (Nov. 37 ASTOUNDING) and Leroy Yerxa's CROSSED WIRES (March 44 AMAZING) George Holman -- SOURDOUGH -- #9 January 44 Odd, odd Venus (Holman style!) Hardluck Hadley and the Venusian coffee wells. -- 1st prize -- CONTAGION -- #10 June 44 More odd Venus. Kleptococcus pilferatorius & prevaricatus falsificatum germs. -- 2nd prize -- AGRICULTURAL GEOLOGY -- #12 December 44 Hardluck Hadley and his ball-bearing-pea crop. Malcolm Jameson -- PIG TRAP -- #1 April 42 Bullard matches Womstock's tale of the Iapetan kangothrus and their four dimensional pouches with one of the Plutonian vacuum hogs. -- 3rd prize -- EUREKA! -- #4 November 42 The Mad Scientist (HOLES, HOLES, HOLES, you Carl Claudy fans) actually invents a solvent that will dissolve anything put into it, but never anything it is put into. -- DOWNFALL -- #7 April 43 The Earliwell emplosion bomb which let the Pacific ocean geyser over Munich. -- 2nd prize -- THE VACUUMULATOR -- #9 January 44 Were you ever in such a bright light you couldn't breathe? I didn't think so. Jameson tops all others in the number of PZ yarns to appear in ASF. page 13
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David Charles -- FINANCE -- #6 September 43 An even neater explanation of the depression than the story AMAZING ran a bit over a decade ago explaining the disastrous Japanese earthquakes. Hal Clement (Harry Stubbs) -- 1st prize -- AVENUE OF ESCAPE -- #4 November 42 For those who can walk fast enough, the full 160 feet between machine gun bullets is plenty of room; no? George E. Dale -- TIME PUSSY -- #1 April 42 Proving it is dangerous to digest your food before you eat it. William M. Danner -- TRUE FIDELITY -- #5 December 42 Maybe it was radio transmission of matter and maybe it wasn't. See Harry Bates' FAREWELL TO THE MASTER (Oct. 40 ASF) and Anthony Gilmore's THE RETURN OF HAWK CARSE (July 42 AMAZING) Charles Ben Davis -- 3rd prize -- YOU SAID IT! -- #8 September 43 Erasmus Turp changes fancy to fact with his electroscamboic Cliche Vitalizer. Lyon Sprague de Camp -- SOME CURIOUS EFFECTS OF TIME TRAVEL -- #1 April 42 Chronomobiles are dangerous because age is inseparable from time. -- 2nd prize -- THE ANECDOTE OF THE NEGATIVE WUGUG -- #3 August 42 If anyone cares to figure out how much $1,000,000 x 2 (to the 450th power) is, just let me know. -- 2nd prize -- THE ANECDOTE OF THE MOVABLE EARS -- #6 February 43 Wherein de Camp pretends he's a mouse. Gordon Garrett -- 2nd prize -- THE ABSENCE OF HEAT -- #10 June 44 It was either Polaris XIV or the galaxy. So naturally -- Joseph Gilbert -- 3rd prize -- DESTINY AND UNCLE LOUIE -- #3 August 42 Harder to find suitable comments for than de Camp's three efforts. Randall Hale -- DE GUSTIBUS -- #2 July 42 Even salt is made of poisonous chlorine and sodium -- with that for inspiration what might not a starving man concoct? George W. Hall -- 1st prize -- APPLESAUCE -- #12 December 44 QZZZ-OOO 1/2 is stuck with the part apples have played in Tellurian history. H. Orlo Hoadley -- 1st prize -- PICTURE FROM TOKYO -- #9 January 44 This was Hoadley's second effort; his first (which may have appeared under his pen name, James B. Harlow) was PRECIOUS AIR and appeared in Microcosmos. Frank Holby -- THE STRANGE CASE OF THE MISSING HERO -- #2 July 42 Just a tighter circle than SUTTON'S STRANGE VOYAGE by James Norman (May 42 Az) -- THE THIRTY-FIRST OF JUNE -- #11 September 44 One of those International Date Line mixups Fox B. Holden -- NOISE IS BEAUTIFUL! -- #6 February 43 Same idea as Walter A. Coole's A SURGICAL ERROR (Nov. 37 ASTOUNDING) and Leroy Yerxa's CROSSED WIRES (March 44 AMAZING) George Holman -- SOURDOUGH -- #9 January 44 Odd, odd Venus (Holman style!) Hardluck Hadley and the Venusian coffee wells. -- 1st prize -- CONTAGION -- #10 June 44 More odd Venus. Kleptococcus pilferatorius & prevaricatus falsificatum germs. -- 2nd prize -- AGRICULTURAL GEOLOGY -- #12 December 44 Hardluck Hadley and his ball-bearing-pea crop. Malcolm Jameson -- PIG TRAP -- #1 April 42 Bullard matches Womstock's tale of the Iapetan kangothrus and their four dimensional pouches with one of the Plutonian vacuum hogs. -- 3rd prize -- EUREKA! -- #4 November 42 The Mad Scientist (HOLES, HOLES, HOLES, you Carl Claudy fans) actually invents a solvent that will dissolve anything put into it, but never anything it is put into. -- DOWNFALL -- #7 April 43 The Earliwell emplosion bomb which let the Pacific ocean geyser over Munich. -- 2nd prize -- THE VACUUMULATOR -- #9 January 44 Were you ever in such a bright light you couldn't breathe? I didn't think so. Jameson tops all others in the number of PZ yarns to appear in ASF. page 13
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