2004-09-06

stormiestl: (Bored Now)
EXETER, England (Reuters) -- Muppets Dr. Bunsen Honeydew and his
assistant Beaker defeated Dr. Strangelove, Dana Scully of "X Files" fame
and Star Trek's Mr. Spock to be voted Britain's favorite screen
scientists on Monday.


They beat their closest rival by a margin of 2 to 1 and won 33 percent
of the 43,000 votes cast in an Internet poll.


Spock came in a distance second with 15 percent followed by The Doctor,
from Dr Who, who garnered 13 percent. Scully, the only woman in the
poll, came in sixth.


"They are accessible, humorous and occasionally blow each other up,"
said Roland Jackson, of the British Association for the Advancement of
Science (BA).


The balding, white-coated Honeydew and flame-haired, bulging-eyed Beaker
created an array of crazy gadgets on the popular television show.


"They're the kind of scientists you would like to be but never quite
dared to," said Alan Slater, a scientist at the University of Exeter in
southwestern England.


The poll, sponsored by the BA and the BBC cult television website gave
the public five weeks to choose their favorite scientist from a
shortlist of 10 that included Dr. Evil from the film "Austin Powers,"
Dr. Frankenstein, Frank N. Furter, of the "Rocky Horror Show Picture
Show," Dr. Emmett Brown, of the film "Back to the Future" and Q of James
Bond fame.


Results of the poll were announced at the start of the week-long BA
science conference here.
stormiestl: (Journal)
Worldcon - Chesley Awards

The Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists (ASFA) Chesley
Awards went to the following artists:


Best Cover Illustration, Hardback Book - Donato Giancola, for "City" by
Clifford D. Simak


Best Cover Illustration, Paperback Book - Todd Lockwood, for "Tangled
Webs", by Elaine Cunningham


Best Cover Illustration, Magazine - Bob Eggleton, for "Fantasy & Science
Fiction" (July 2003)


Best Interior Illustration - Todd Lockwood, for "Crossing Into Empire"
("Realms of Fantasy", June 2003)


Best Gaming-Related Illustration - Todd Lockwood, for "Draconomicon", a D&D
accessory (WOTC)


Best Product Illustration - Dean Morrissey, for "Anna of the Celts" fine
art print, Greenwich Workshop


Best Art Director - Irene Gallo, for Tor Books


Best Three Dimensional Art - Gary Lippincott, for "Jack" (bronze)


Best Monochrome Work, Unpublished - Gary Lippincott, for "Autumn Fairies"
(watercolor and pencil)


Best Color Work, Unpublished - Michael Whelan, for "She" (acrylic)


Award for Contribution to ASFA - Teresa Patterson, for work for ASFA above
and beyond officer duties
stormiestl: (Book turning pages)
In 1954, no 1953 Hugo awards were given by the Worldcon, so the "Retro
Hugos" were awarded this year, 50 years later.


The winners were:


Best Novel - Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury


Best Novella - A Case of Conscience, by James Blish


Best Novelette - Earthman, Come Home, by James Blish


Best Short Story - The Nine Billion Names of God, by Arthur C. Clarke


Best Related Book - Conquest of the Moon, by Wernher von Braun, Fred L.
Whipple, & Willy Ley


Best Professional Editor - John W. Campbell, Jr.


Best Professional Artist - Chesley Bonestell


Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form - The War of the Worlds


Best Fanzine - Slant, Walter Willis, ed., James White, art editor


Best Fan Writer - Bob Tucker
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