Social:Interlac (APA)
Interlac is a bimonthly amateur press association devoted to the DC Comics science fiction superhero team the Legion of Super-Heroes. It was the first APA devoted to the Legion[citation needed] and, despite the decline of APAs due to Internet forums, continues to operate to this day. June 2016 marked the 40th anniversary. Interlac’s name comes from the designated communication language of the 30th-century United Planets confederation (the milieu in which the Legion of Super-Heroes operates).
History
Rich Morrissey founded the APA in June 1976, calling it LEAPA (the LEgion Amateur Press Association); it changed its name to Interlac three mailings later. There were 15 founding members, and the first mailing was 26 pages.[1]
At the time, there were few general-interest comics APAs, CAPA-alpha and APA-5 being the exceptions. But never before in comic book fandom had the fans of a single comic book come together in a single APA.[1] So while Interlac’s form came from CAPA-alpha, its membership came from the Legion Fan Club (started by 13-year-old Mike Flynn in 1972)[2] and The Legion Outpost (a fanzine started in 1972).[3]
In 1976, the Legion of Super-Heroes’ comic was finally on a solid footing, with the rich Legion mythos giving members plenty to discuss. As the roster grew—soon reaching its 50-member limit—it became clear that the APA had become a true community. Members met each other at comic book conventions and became real-life friends; members Tom Bierbaum and Mary Gilmore met through the APA, began a romance, and eventually married.[1] The Bierbaums later graduated from Interlac to working as scripters of the Legion comic itself.
The roster, with the exception of a few stalwarts, has turned over repeatedly, breathing fresh life and bringing new points of view into the forum. All the same, in 2000, eight of the 15 founders were still on the roster, waiting list, or honorary membership list, and four of the original 15 had remained on the roster continuously.[1]
At one point, a spinoff APA devoted to music was formed, dubbed Quarternotes by its founders.
Policies
- Membership
Interlac membership is limited to 50 roster slots. Minimum activity requirement is four collated and stapled pages in any three consecutive mailings. Applicants for membership send the Leader $10.00 to join the waitlist. A new waitlister receives a copy of the most recently available mailing and thereafter a Bulletin until becoming a member. Waitlisters are encouraged to submit contributions from the waitlist; for doing so, they’ll be eligible to purchase a copy of the mailing the contribution appears in. Any waitlister, having contributed at least ten pages, may be granted an extension of their invited period at the Leader’s discretion.
Honorary memberships have been awarded to former members of at least three years whose presence “significantly enriched Interlac and furthered its goals.” No more than one person per year may be awarded an honorary membership.
- Expenses
Divided evenly among the members, except the Leader(s) (to a maximum of two individuals at a time), who is exempt. Mailings for sale are available to members and waitlisters.
- Leadership elections
The Leader is elected by the majority of the voting membership to a one-year term. The Leader is responsible for distributing mailings, appointing a Deputy to serve in case of absence, setting deadlines, presenting a complete statement of the APA’s finances in each mailing’s Bulletin and interpreting the Constitution. The Leader is responsible for setting the copy count within a limit of 60.
Notable members (past and present)
- Jim Shooter (founding member)
- Tom and Mary Bierbaum
- Dave Cockrum
- Colleen Doran
- Paul Levitz
- Tom McCraw
- Mark Waid
See also
- Legion of Super-Heroes
- Amateur press association
- Interlac
- Science fiction fandom
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Broertjes, Harry. “The History of Interlac (and Legion Fandom, Too!),” Interlac APA website. Accessed Oct. 21, 2008.
- ↑ Estradera, Mariano Bayona. “Second Part: The Profusion of Super-Heroes,” Legion of Super-Heroes fansite (2002). Accessed Oct. 21, 2008.
- ↑ Dallas, Keith. “Silver Soapbox: Celebrating the Best of a Fanzine That Influenced the Future,” Comics Bulletin (Nov. 11, 2004). Accessed Oct. 21, 2008.
External links