THE CULTfrom Fancyclopedia 2
Sort of a combination APA and chainletter, founded by
Peter Vorzimer in late 1955. Thirteen members take part through publication
of the official organ, THE FANTASY ROTATOR, by each
member in succession... frequency of publication, every three weeks, making
39 weeks for a "cycle" at the end of which a new Official Arbiter is elected.
Copies go to all members and the top five ("active") waitinglisters; all must
comment on at least every other FR to the following editor; failure means
expulsion. Failure to publish in turn or at least give notice of delay (which
cannot exceed 3 weeks) also means expulsion. The active waiting list serves
either to prepare the prospective member for the Cult before he gets in or
weed out deadwood before it gets tangled in the machinery. Early Cultists
were strictly 7th Fandom types, handpicked by Vorzimer, and
Little Peter's poorly written constitution combined with their inexperience
to produce many official snarls and wrangles. Over 30 Amendments had to be
passed; the last one turned out to have the effect of making amendments null
and void (this turned out to be a misinterpretation), and the Cultists threw
the whole thing out in disgust. Charles Wells wrote up a revised constitution
that was accepted and worked for several years with few amendments (e g one
setting up an Official Arbiter, anarchy having proved impractical) tho in
early 1959 another Constitutional hassle began. The average Fantasy Rotator
runs from 8 to 70 pages, averaging 20-30; it features members' letters plus,
on occasion, editorials, features, and material of all kinds, mostly by Cult
members. Each is given an individual title (tho some members repeat their own
earlier titles) to which "Fantasy Rotator __" is a subtitle. A respectable
amount of quality material has seen print first in the Cult, later appearing
in fanzines of larger circulation.
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