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WSFA (channel 12) is a television station in Montgomery, Alabama, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Gray Media alongside Selma –licensed low-power , Class A Telemundo affiliate WBXM-CD (channel 15).
The Washington Science Fiction Association (WSFA) is the oldest science fiction club in the Washington, D.C. area. It is also one of the oldest science fiction clubs, founded in 1947 by seven fans who met at that year's Worldcon in Philadelphia, the fifth Worldcon held.
The WSFA Journal is a science-fiction fanzine that was published approximately once a month from 1965 to 2012 by the Washington Science Fiction Association (WSFA).. The journal typically contains reviews of books, movies, science fiction fanzines, science fiction conventions, TV shows, and websites; obituaries; minutes of WSFA meetings; humor; original fantasy and science fiction; cartoons ...
The WSFA Small Press Award was inaugurated by the Washington Science Fiction Association in 2007. The award is open to works of imaginative literature (e.g. science fiction , fantasy , horror ) published in English for the first time in the previous calendar year.
Disclave was a science fiction convention run by the Washington Science Fiction Association (WSFA) in or near Washington, D.C., in the spring of nearly every year from 1950 [1] through 1997. By many counts, it was the third-oldest science fiction convention.
In 1955, the owners of WKY purchased WSFA-TV in Montgomery, Alabama, and sent McGee there as news director. WSFA was an affiliate of NBC. As the civil rights movement gained national coverage, McGee's work came to the notice of NBC, which offered him a position with the network, based in New York City. He went on to become "one of television's ...
WSFA was originally operated under the ownership of the Montgomery Broadcasting Company, Inc., [9] a partnership between local businessmen Howard Pill and Gordon Persons. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Persons, who stepped down as president of the company in 1939, [ 12 ] would go on to serve as the forty-third governor of Alabama from 1951 to 1955.
Alex Shvartsman (born November 19, 1975) is an American science fiction and fantasy writer and editor known primarily for humorous short stories. He won the WSFA Small Press Award for Short Fiction in 2014 for his short story "Explaining Cthulhu to Grandma" published in the InterGalactic Medicine Show magazine.