Lisa Selitzer: Difference between revisions

From The Science Fiction Forum Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Blind Secretary of the Forum)
 
(Blind Secretary of the Forum)
Line 1: Line 1:
Lisa was Secretary of the Forum from 1979 to 1984.
Lisa was Secretary of the Forum from 1979 to 1984. As Secretary she typed up the Minutes of Forum Meetings for submission to Polity. One interesting quirk was that she had the unconcious habit of hitting the "K" key at random throughout the notes. Thus "K'Lisa" (the Klingon) as a nickname, and the Random K typo was mocked/repeated in her transcribed Log Entries. As a blind person she was also responsible for starting and maintaining the Braille Collection of Analog, Asimov's, and Galaxy magazines as well as a few random Braille books. Unfortunately five years work and hundreds of volumes were lost in the Great Fire.
As Secretary she typed up the Minutes of Forum Meetings for submission to Polity. One interesting quirk was that she had the unconcious habit of hitting the "K" key at random throughout the notes. Thus "K'Lisa" (the Klingon) as a nickname, and the Random K typo was mocked/repeated in her transcribed Log Entries.  
As a blind person she was also responsible for starting and maintaining the Braille Collection of Analog, Asimov's, and Galaxy magazines as well as a few random Braille books. Unfortunately five years work and hundreds of volumes were lost in the Great Fire.

Revision as of 11:28, 27 February 2007

Lisa was Secretary of the Forum from 1979 to 1984. As Secretary she typed up the Minutes of Forum Meetings for submission to Polity. One interesting quirk was that she had the unconcious habit of hitting the "K" key at random throughout the notes. Thus "K'Lisa" (the Klingon) as a nickname, and the Random K typo was mocked/repeated in her transcribed Log Entries. As a blind person she was also responsible for starting and maintaining the Braille Collection of Analog, Asimov's, and Galaxy magazines as well as a few random Braille books. Unfortunately five years work and hundreds of volumes were lost in the Great Fire.