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A remnant from the site where this was torn down. It doesn't show up on the LUST list but that's not definitive.

Invitation to join our new group “Star Trek Forever” No Limits on uploads!

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Star Trek: Asterisk "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home"

Written by Steve Beaudry

Release Date: November 26, 1986

Written by: Steve Meerson & Peter Krikes and Harve Bennett & Nicholas Meyer

Directed by: Leonard Nimoy

Review

Deep in the outer reaches of space, a monstrous space probe passes by the USS Saratoga and knocks its power out on the way to Earth. Meanwhile, on Earth, a Klingon ambassador accuses Kirk of murdering a ship full of Klingons in his quest to exterminate the Klingon race with the Genesis probe (that thing will just not go away). The Federation president says that Kirk will face nine violations of Starfleet regulations, the crew of the Enterprise has been stuck on Vulcan for three months, and on top of all that, a computer is trying to find out how Spock feels. There's nowhere to go from here but up.

 

Well, in The Search for Spock, Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise stole a starship, blew it up, visited a forbidden planet, and apparently six other naughty things, so now they're getting ready to go back to Earth on their stolen Klingon Bird-of-Prey and face the music. There's just one hitch in this plan: the probe. It has now reached earth, shut down main power to... everything... and caused a huge weather phenomenon that blocked out the sun. So, basically, humanity has however long it'll take for Earth to freeze from lack of sunlight to tell this thing to move out of the way.

"When this is over, I'm quitting Starfleet and starting a gumbo restaurant."

In their Klingon ship, Kirk and the crew approach Earth and pick up a distress call from the president with the manly gray beard saying that Earth is under attack, so they pick up the probe's transmissions and analyze it. Since the transmission appears to be directed at the oceans, Kirk has Uhura compensate for the density of the water. When the audio effects are all in, the probe's transmission ends up sounding a lot like whale song; specifically, the extinct humpback whale. There's only one way they can get a humpback whale to answer the probe: The Guardian of Forev-... er... wait, no, the highly dangerous and tricky slingshot time warp maneuver. So there are two ways. We'll go with the dangerous one for now.

 

When they arrive in 1986, they confirm the date by testing the pollution in the air. Then they go into cloak and land in the middle of a park in San Francisco. After scaring off a couple of trash guys, the crew sets out to downtown. Their mission: 1) find humpback whales 2) get them on board the Klingon ship 3) fix the ship's dilithium crystals so they can go home. They split up to achieve their separate goals. Spock and Kirk go for the whales, Bones and Scotty go to build a proper tank, Uhura and Chekov find some nuclear power to fix the crystals.

Spock would like to take this opportunity to learn karate.

Spock and Kirk easily find some whales after they see an advertisement for the local whale institute where they meet George, Gracie and Dr. Gillian Taylor. George and Gracie are the whales and Gillian is the nice lady who knows everything about them. So Spock and Kirk get to know about the whales in their own unique way: Spock mind melds with Gracie and Kirk seduces Gillian. Meanwhile, Bones and Scotty are having a time of their own getting some plexiglass to make a whale tank. Luckily, they have an ace up their sleeves. They meet with a guy who deals in plexiglass and trade the secret formula for transparent aluminum in exchange for their required plexiglass. Also, Sulu learns how to drive a helicopter so they can lift all that plexiglass to the ship.

 

Things are just about set to go; Kirk is ready to pick up the whales, the plexiglass is ready to be delivered, everything is running smoothly until Chekov screws things up. He finds the USS Enterprise, the aircraft carrier, and, with Uhura's help, steals some of its nuclear power. Well, the officers on board sense the power drain and go looking for him. He hands the power device over to Uhura who beams up to the Klingon ship. But there's not enough transporter power to get Chekov, too, and he's captured. After escaping by attempting and failing to stun his captors, he runs and jumps off a high platform and hospitalizes himself.

It's possible they just got too high.

Chekov arrives at Mercy Hospital, so now they have to go save him before taking off. But to make matters worse, Gillian decided she wants to help, so she wandered off into the park and ran into the cloaked ship. So they beam her aboard, explain a few things, and then run off to save Chekov. With Gillian's help, they sneak into the hospital and pretend to be doctors. Chekov, a suspected Russian spy, is being kept under guard, but Bones easily tricks them into believing they have an emergency. He has a bit of a fight with the attending surgeon and then Kirk locks the surgeon and his team in a small room. Bones heals Chekov, and they leave. The guards give chase once they see that Chekov is being kidnapped, but they beam up in the elevator and make a clean getaway.

 

Ok, so, Chekov is safe, the tank is built, the dilithium crystals are fixed, all they need now are the whales. Kirk gets their tracking frequency from Gillian and says his goodbyes. She can't, after all, go to the future with them. Right? Weellll... as soon as he starts transporting aboard the ship, Gillian hops on him and comes with. She's staying whether Kirk likes it or not. With Gillian aboard, they set out to find George and Gracie. They find them right in front of a whaling ship. Still cloaked, they head right over to them and just hover for a bit while the whaling ship takes aim. And then... the decloakening.

Klingons on the port bow, captain!

Successfully having scared off the whalers, Scotty beams up George and Gracie and they make their way to the future. In a great evolution of Spock's revived character, he makes his "best guess" with the calculations for time warp, and they head out. Back in the future, they crash into San Francisco Bay. While the rest of the crew abandons ship, Kirk releases the whales out of the cargo bay and into the ocean. Once they're out, Kirk joins his crew as the whales start talking to the probe. After a delightful reunion and conversation with its good buddies, George and Gracie, the Probe turns around, says "thank you!" and leaves the Sol system in peace. The day is saved! So, now it's time for Kirk to stand trial.

 

Oh, right, yeah, this was the whole reason they were coming back to Earth, wasn't it? The crew of the Enterprise all stand in front of the president to be judged. Because for some reason the president is the judge in the future. Ready to be taken out of Starfleet forever, they all, including Spock who "stands with his shipmates", they all hear the charges brought to them. And then the president says he's getting rid of all of them in light of them saving the entire Earth, and all. The only charge that sticks, disobeying a superior officer, is directed solely at Kirk and because of it, he is reduced in rank to Captain. Which is basically like grounding a nerd to his room with the Internet still on. And not only that, it wouldn't be Star Trek and Kirk wouldn't be Captain without the proper ship. They head out to the shipyard and find the brand spankin' new USS Enterprise NCC-1701-A. The only proper ship for them to go and "see what's out there."

 

Overall Thoughts

This had been my absolute favorite Star Trek movie for the longest time until my tastes matured and I learned to like The Wrath of Kahn just slightly better. I love a good comedy sci-fi, especially when that comedy sci-fi involves time travel! Every good Star Trek series needs a comedy relief. "The Trouble with Tribbles" was that for The Original Series and this movie is that for the movie series. And, in fact, this movie was so monstrously successful, that it was almost entirely responsible for green-lighting The Next Generation. Picard would take command almost a year after this movie was released and Trek would never be the same.

 

Block #1 for Merran! ;) Based on this tutorial but upsized to a 12 1/2" block and with additional corners... selvageblog.blogspot.com.au/2010/06/quilt-along-asterisk-...

I kept the FMQ as simple as possible.

I used the same stripe fabric through the asterisk and polka dotted fabric of all colors in the block. It was a lot of fun to do.

Invitation to join our new group “Star Trek Forever” No Limits on uploads!

www.flickr.com/groups/2601080@N25/

 

Star Trek: Asterisk "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home"

Written by Steve Beaudry

Release Date: November 26, 1986

Written by: Steve Meerson & Peter Krikes and Harve Bennett & Nicholas Meyer

Directed by: Leonard Nimoy

Review

Deep in the outer reaches of space, a monstrous space probe passes by the USS Saratoga and knocks its power out on the way to Earth. Meanwhile, on Earth, a Klingon ambassador accuses Kirk of murdering a ship full of Klingons in his quest to exterminate the Klingon race with the Genesis probe (that thing will just not go away). The Federation president says that Kirk will face nine violations of Starfleet regulations, the crew of the Enterprise has been stuck on Vulcan for three months, and on top of all that, a computer is trying to find out how Spock feels. There's nowhere to go from here but up.

 

Well, in The Search for Spock, Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise stole a starship, blew it up, visited a forbidden planet, and apparently six other naughty things, so now they're getting ready to go back to Earth on their stolen Klingon Bird-of-Prey and face the music. There's just one hitch in this plan: the probe. It has now reached earth, shut down main power to... everything... and caused a huge weather phenomenon that blocked out the sun. So, basically, humanity has however long it'll take for Earth to freeze from lack of sunlight to tell this thing to move out of the way.

"When this is over, I'm quitting Starfleet and starting a gumbo restaurant."

In their Klingon ship, Kirk and the crew approach Earth and pick up a distress call from the president with the manly gray beard saying that Earth is under attack, so they pick up the probe's transmissions and analyze it. Since the transmission appears to be directed at the oceans, Kirk has Uhura compensate for the density of the water. When the audio effects are all in, the probe's transmission ends up sounding a lot like whale song; specifically, the extinct humpback whale. There's only one way they can get a humpback whale to answer the probe: The Guardian of Forev-... er... wait, no, the highly dangerous and tricky slingshot time warp maneuver. So there are two ways. We'll go with the dangerous one for now.

 

When they arrive in 1986, they confirm the date by testing the pollution in the air. Then they go into cloak and land in the middle of a park in San Francisco. After scaring off a couple of trash guys, the crew sets out to downtown. Their mission: 1) find humpback whales 2) get them on board the Klingon ship 3) fix the ship's dilithium crystals so they can go home. They split up to achieve their separate goals. Spock and Kirk go for the whales, Bones and Scotty go to build a proper tank, Uhura and Chekov find some nuclear power to fix the crystals.

Spock would like to take this opportunity to learn karate.

Spock and Kirk easily find some whales after they see an advertisement for the local whale institute where they meet George, Gracie and Dr. Gillian Taylor. George and Gracie are the whales and Gillian is the nice lady who knows everything about them. So Spock and Kirk get to know about the whales in their own unique way: Spock mind melds with Gracie and Kirk seduces Gillian. Meanwhile, Bones and Scotty are having a time of their own getting some plexiglass to make a whale tank. Luckily, they have an ace up their sleeves. They meet with a guy who deals in plexiglass and trade the secret formula for transparent aluminum in exchange for their required plexiglass. Also, Sulu learns how to drive a helicopter so they can lift all that plexiglass to the ship.

 

Things are just about set to go; Kirk is ready to pick up the whales, the plexiglass is ready to be delivered, everything is running smoothly until Chekov screws things up. He finds the USS Enterprise, the aircraft carrier, and, with Uhura's help, steals some of its nuclear power. Well, the officers on board sense the power drain and go looking for him. He hands the power device over to Uhura who beams up to the Klingon ship. But there's not enough transporter power to get Chekov, too, and he's captured. After escaping by attempting and failing to stun his captors, he runs and jumps off a high platform and hospitalizes himself.

It's possible they just got too high.

Chekov arrives at Mercy Hospital, so now they have to go save him before taking off. But to make matters worse, Gillian decided she wants to help, so she wandered off into the park and ran into the cloaked ship. So they beam her aboard, explain a few things, and then run off to save Chekov. With Gillian's help, they sneak into the hospital and pretend to be doctors. Chekov, a suspected Russian spy, is being kept under guard, but Bones easily tricks them into believing they have an emergency. He has a bit of a fight with the attending surgeon and then Kirk locks the surgeon and his team in a small room. Bones heals Chekov, and they leave. The guards give chase once they see that Chekov is being kidnapped, but they beam up in the elevator and make a clean getaway.

 

Ok, so, Chekov is safe, the tank is built, the dilithium crystals are fixed, all they need now are the whales. Kirk gets their tracking frequency from Gillian and says his goodbyes. She can't, after all, go to the future with them. Right? Weellll... as soon as he starts transporting aboard the ship, Gillian hops on him and comes with. She's staying whether Kirk likes it or not. With Gillian aboard, they set out to find George and Gracie. They find them right in front of a whaling ship. Still cloaked, they head right over to them and just hover for a bit while the whaling ship takes aim. And then... the decloakening.

Klingons on the port bow, captain!

Successfully having scared off the whalers, Scotty beams up George and Gracie and they make their way to the future. In a great evolution of Spock's revived character, he makes his "best guess" with the calculations for time warp, and they head out. Back in the future, they crash into San Francisco Bay. While the rest of the crew abandons ship, Kirk releases the whales out of the cargo bay and into the ocean. Once they're out, Kirk joins his crew as the whales start talking to the probe. After a delightful reunion and conversation with its good buddies, George and Gracie, the Probe turns around, says "thank you!" and leaves the Sol system in peace. The day is saved! So, now it's time for Kirk to stand trial.

 

Oh, right, yeah, this was the whole reason they were coming back to Earth, wasn't it? The crew of the Enterprise all stand in front of the president to be judged. Because for some reason the president is the judge in the future. Ready to be taken out of Starfleet forever, they all, including Spock who "stands with his shipmates", they all hear the charges brought to them. And then the president says he's getting rid of all of them in light of them saving the entire Earth, and all. The only charge that sticks, disobeying a superior officer, is directed solely at Kirk and because of it, he is reduced in rank to Captain. Which is basically like grounding a nerd to his room with the Internet still on. And not only that, it wouldn't be Star Trek and Kirk wouldn't be Captain without the proper ship. They head out to the shipyard and find the brand spankin' new USS Enterprise NCC-1701-A. The only proper ship for them to go and "see what's out there."

 

Overall Thoughts

This had been my absolute favorite Star Trek movie for the longest time until my tastes matured and I learned to like The Wrath of Kahn just slightly better. I love a good comedy sci-fi, especially when that comedy sci-fi involves time travel! Every good Star Trek series needs a comedy relief. "The Trouble with Tribbles" was that for The Original Series and this movie is that for the movie series. And, in fact, this movie was so monstrously successful, that it was almost entirely responsible for green-lighting The Next Generation. Picard would take command almost a year after this movie was released and Trek would never be the same.

 

Invitation to join our new group “Star Trek Forever” No Limits on uploads!

www.flickr.com/groups/2601080@N25/

 

Star Trek: Asterisk "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home"

Written by Steve Beaudry

Release Date: November 26, 1986

Written by: Steve Meerson & Peter Krikes and Harve Bennett & Nicholas Meyer

Directed by: Leonard Nimoy

Review

Deep in the outer reaches of space, a monstrous space probe passes by the USS Saratoga and knocks its power out on the way to Earth. Meanwhile, on Earth, a Klingon ambassador accuses Kirk of murdering a ship full of Klingons in his quest to exterminate the Klingon race with the Genesis probe (that thing will just not go away). The Federation president says that Kirk will face nine violations of Starfleet regulations, the crew of the Enterprise has been stuck on Vulcan for three months, and on top of all that, a computer is trying to find out how Spock feels. There's nowhere to go from here but up.

 

Well, in The Search for Spock, Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise stole a starship, blew it up, visited a forbidden planet, and apparently six other naughty things, so now they're getting ready to go back to Earth on their stolen Klingon Bird-of-Prey and face the music. There's just one hitch in this plan: the probe. It has now reached earth, shut down main power to... everything... and caused a huge weather phenomenon that blocked out the sun. So, basically, humanity has however long it'll take for Earth to freeze from lack of sunlight to tell this thing to move out of the way.

"When this is over, I'm quitting Starfleet and starting a gumbo restaurant."

In their Klingon ship, Kirk and the crew approach Earth and pick up a distress call from the president with the manly gray beard saying that Earth is under attack, so they pick up the probe's transmissions and analyze it. Since the transmission appears to be directed at the oceans, Kirk has Uhura compensate for the density of the water. When the audio effects are all in, the probe's transmission ends up sounding a lot like whale song; specifically, the extinct humpback whale. There's only one way they can get a humpback whale to answer the probe: The Guardian of Forev-... er... wait, no, the highly dangerous and tricky slingshot time warp maneuver. So there are two ways. We'll go with the dangerous one for now.

 

When they arrive in 1986, they confirm the date by testing the pollution in the air. Then they go into cloak and land in the middle of a park in San Francisco. After scaring off a couple of trash guys, the crew sets out to downtown. Their mission: 1) find humpback whales 2) get them on board the Klingon ship 3) fix the ship's dilithium crystals so they can go home. They split up to achieve their separate goals. Spock and Kirk go for the whales, Bones and Scotty go to build a proper tank, Uhura and Chekov find some nuclear power to fix the crystals.

Spock would like to take this opportunity to learn karate.

Spock and Kirk easily find some whales after they see an advertisement for the local whale institute where they meet George, Gracie and Dr. Gillian Taylor. George and Gracie are the whales and Gillian is the nice lady who knows everything about them. So Spock and Kirk get to know about the whales in their own unique way: Spock mind melds with Gracie and Kirk seduces Gillian. Meanwhile, Bones and Scotty are having a time of their own getting some plexiglass to make a whale tank. Luckily, they have an ace up their sleeves. They meet with a guy who deals in plexiglass and trade the secret formula for transparent aluminum in exchange for their required plexiglass. Also, Sulu learns how to drive a helicopter so they can lift all that plexiglass to the ship.

 

Things are just about set to go; Kirk is ready to pick up the whales, the plexiglass is ready to be delivered, everything is running smoothly until Chekov screws things up. He finds the USS Enterprise, the aircraft carrier, and, with Uhura's help, steals some of its nuclear power. Well, the officers on board sense the power drain and go looking for him. He hands the power device over to Uhura who beams up to the Klingon ship. But there's not enough transporter power to get Chekov, too, and he's captured. After escaping by attempting and failing to stun his captors, he runs and jumps off a high platform and hospitalizes himself.

It's possible they just got too high.

Chekov arrives at Mercy Hospital, so now they have to go save him before taking off. But to make matters worse, Gillian decided she wants to help, so she wandered off into the park and ran into the cloaked ship. So they beam her aboard, explain a few things, and then run off to save Chekov. With Gillian's help, they sneak into the hospital and pretend to be doctors. Chekov, a suspected Russian spy, is being kept under guard, but Bones easily tricks them into believing they have an emergency. He has a bit of a fight with the attending surgeon and then Kirk locks the surgeon and his team in a small room. Bones heals Chekov, and they leave. The guards give chase once they see that Chekov is being kidnapped, but they beam up in the elevator and make a clean getaway.

 

Ok, so, Chekov is safe, the tank is built, the dilithium crystals are fixed, all they need now are the whales. Kirk gets their tracking frequency from Gillian and says his goodbyes. She can't, after all, go to the future with them. Right? Weellll... as soon as he starts transporting aboard the ship, Gillian hops on him and comes with. She's staying whether Kirk likes it or not. With Gillian aboard, they set out to find George and Gracie. They find them right in front of a whaling ship. Still cloaked, they head right over to them and just hover for a bit while the whaling ship takes aim. And then... the decloakening.

Klingons on the port bow, captain!

Successfully having scared off the whalers, Scotty beams up George and Gracie and they make their way to the future. In a great evolution of Spock's revived character, he makes his "best guess" with the calculations for time warp, and they head out. Back in the future, they crash into San Francisco Bay. While the rest of the crew abandons ship, Kirk releases the whales out of the cargo bay and into the ocean. Once they're out, Kirk joins his crew as the whales start talking to the probe. After a delightful reunion and conversation with its good buddies, George and Gracie, the Probe turns around, says "thank you!" and leaves the Sol system in peace. The day is saved! So, now it's time for Kirk to stand trial.

 

Oh, right, yeah, this was the whole reason they were coming back to Earth, wasn't it? The crew of the Enterprise all stand in front of the president to be judged. Because for some reason the president is the judge in the future. Ready to be taken out of Starfleet forever, they all, including Spock who "stands with his shipmates", they all hear the charges brought to them. And then the president says he's getting rid of all of them in light of them saving the entire Earth, and all. The only charge that sticks, disobeying a superior officer, is directed solely at Kirk and because of it, he is reduced in rank to Captain. Which is basically like grounding a nerd to his room with the Internet still on. And not only that, it wouldn't be Star Trek and Kirk wouldn't be Captain without the proper ship. They head out to the shipyard and find the brand spankin' new USS Enterprise NCC-1701-A. The only proper ship for them to go and "see what's out there."

 

Overall Thoughts

This had been my absolute favorite Star Trek movie for the longest time until my tastes matured and I learned to like The Wrath of Kahn just slightly better. I love a good comedy sci-fi, especially when that comedy sci-fi involves time travel! Every good Star Trek series needs a comedy relief. "The Trouble with Tribbles" was that for The Original Series and this movie is that for the movie series. And, in fact, this movie was so monstrously successful, that it was almost entirely responsible for green-lighting The Next Generation. Picard would take command almost a year after this movie was released and Trek would never be the same.

 

"editor-in-chief" James H.Marsh.

 

2nd edition, revised. Edmonton, Hurtig Publishers Limited, [december] 1988. ISBN o-8883o-326-2.

 

4 volumes in 9-1/16 12-1/16 x 6-1/4 cream linen-covered brown board slipbox, both sides printed gold foil letterpress:

 

1. THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA VOLUME I A - Edu..

ISBN o-8883o-327-o.

8-7/16 x 1o-7/8, 176 sheets white Rolland 5o Lb S.T. Encyclopedia Opaque folded to 22 signatures of 8 sheets each, sewn pearl white in 13 stitches & glued into white heavy bond endpapers & 8-3/4 x 11-5/16 red linen-covered boards with approx.1-5/16" yellow & red cloth applique head~ & tailbands, spine only printed gold foil letterpress, interiors all except 3 pp (versos of 3rd & 21st leaves, recto 19th) printed black offset with 3-colour process additions to 297 pp (393 black only); paginated i-xli/1-662;

 

2. THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA VOLUME II Edu - Min.

ISBN o-8883o-328-9.

as volume 1 but all printed with 3-colour process additions to 331 pp (368 black only); paginated 663-1364;

 

3. THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA VOLUME III Min - Sta.

ISBN o-8883o-329-7.

as volume 1 but all printed with 3-colour process additions to 358 pp (34o black only); paginated 1365-2o66;

 

4. THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA VOLUME IV Sta - Z.

ISBN o-8883o-33o-o.

as volume 1 but 168 sheets in 21 signatures with all except p.2364 printed, 3-colour process additions to 15o pp (34o black only); paginated 2o67-2736.

 

all volumes with uniform endpaper graphic by Michael J.Lee.

 

3174 contributors ID'd (note: 248 asterisked names contribute to all 4 volumes; questioned names appear in the index without their contribution(s) having been located):

Caroline Louise Abbott*, Irving Abella*, William Aberhart, Thomas S.Abler, Mark Abley, Baha R.Abu-Laban, George Ackerman, Donald F.Acton, Peter Adams, Jacqueline Adell, Peter A.Adie?, Catherine Ahearn, David E.Aiken, Jim Albert, Frederick A.Aldrich, Eric Aldwinckle, Peter Aliknak, Gratien Allaire, Jacques Allard, A.Richard Allen, Karyn Elizabeth Allen, Max Allen, Robert S.Allen*, Willard F.Allen, Marlene Michele Alt*, Patrick Altman, John Amatt, Laurent Amiot, Pierre Anctil, Bob Anderson, Donald W.Anderson, Doris H.Anderson, Duncan M.Anderson, Frank W.Anderson, Grace Merle Anderson, Peter S.Anderson*, Christopher A.Andreae, Bernard Andres, Sheila Andrew, Florence K.Andrews, Donald F.P.Andrus, Paul Anicef, Thomas H.Anstey, Louis Applebaum, Christon I.Archer*, David J.W.Archer, Clinton Archibald, Mary Archibald, Eugene Y.Arima, Allan Arlett, Leslie Armour, Pat Armstrong, William Armstrong, John T.Arnason, Georges Arsenault, Celine Arseneault*, Eric R.Arthur, Alan F.J.Artibise*, Michael I.Asch, Kenojuak Ashevak, Kiugak Ashoona, Athanasios Asimakopulos, Alain Asselin, Alan J.Asselstine, Barbara Astman, John Atchison, T.Atkinson, Margaret Atwood, Irene E.Aubrey, Alasi Audla, Eleanor E.Augusteijn, Karl Aun, Peter J.Austin-Smith, Helgi H.Austman, Donald H.Avery, Thomas Axworthy, William A.Ayer, Hugh D.Ayers, G.Burton Ayles, John Ayre, Maureen Aytenfisu, Douglas R.Babcock, Robert H.Babcock, Robert E.Babe, Leo Bachle, Morrell P.Bachynski, Margaret Baerwaldt, Harry Baglole, Kenneth Bagnell, David H.Bai, Margaret J.Baigent, Karen E.Bailey, Paul Bailey, Francis Baillairge, David M.Baird, Patricia A.Baird, Allan J.Baker, G.Blaine Baker, Melvin Baker, R.T.Baker, William M.Baker, Chalres S.Baldwin, Douglas O.Baldwin, John R.Baldwin, W.W.Baldwin, Gordon Bale, Georgiana G.Ball, Norman R.Ball, Robert J.Bandoni, Paul A.Banfield, Keith Gordon Banting, Alvin Baragar, Marilyn J.Barber, Douglas F.Barbour*, Clifford A.V.Barker, Jon C.Barlow, Jean Barman, David T.Barnard, John Barnes, Reg G.Barnes, Elinor Barr, John J.Barr, Remigio Germano Barradas, Robert F.Barratt*, Tony Barrett, Wayne R.Barrett, H.J.Barrie, John Barrington-Leigh, Ted Barris*, George S.Barry, David W.Bartlett, Donald R.Bartlett, William Henry Bartlett, James F.Basinger, Peter A.Baskerville, Marilyn J.Baszczynski, Alan H.Batten, Jean-Louis Baudouin, Carol Baum, John C.Bayfield, Jules Bazin, Bob Beal, Gladys Bean, Norma Bearcroft, William R.Beard, Jackson Beardy, Belinda A.Beaton*, Owen B.Beattie, Henri Beau, Gerald-A.Beaudoin*, Rejean Beaudoin, Jacqueline Beaudoin-Ross, Louise Beaudry, Benjamin Beaufoy, France Beauregard, Brian P

B.N.Beaven, Brian R.Bechtel, J.Murray Beck*, Margaret Beckman, John Beckwith, Roger Bedard, Michael Bedford, Dean Beeby, Don R.Beer, Michael D.Behiels*, Madeleine Beland, Mario Beland, Guy Belanger, Real Belanger, Rene Belanger, Roger Belanger, Jean Belisle, D.G.Bell, Norman Bell, Norman W.Bell, Ruben C.Bellan, Andre Belleau, Rene J.Belzile, Beverley Bendell, J.W.Bengough, Gerry Bennett, John Bennett, Edward Horton Bensley, Douglas Bentham, K.Bentham, D.M.R.Bentley, David J.Bercuson, William Berczy, John J.Bergen, Jeniva Berger, Thomas R.Berger, Claude Bergeron, A.T.Bergerud, Norbert Berkowitz, Andre Bernard, Frank R.Bernard, Jean-Paul Bernard, Jean-Thomas Bernard, Jacques Bernier, Marc Bernier, Elliott Bernshaw, Nicole Bernshaw, Jonathan Berry, Michael J.Berry, Ralph Berry, Pierre Berton, Neil Besner*, Diane E.Bessai, Carl Betke, John Michael Bewers, Onnig Beylerian, Bruce Bezaire, M.Vincent Bezeau, Reginald W.Bibby, Gilles Bibeau, Ivan B.Bickell, Julius Bigauskas, Petro B.T.Bilaniuk, Robert Billings, Ge4offrey Bilson, B.C.Binning, Carolyn J.Bir, Michael S.Bird, Richard M.Bird, Andrew Birrell, Carol Anne Bishop, Charles A.Bishop, Mary F.Bishop, Alastair Bissett-Johnson, Conrad M.Black, Joseph Laurence Black, Martha Louise Black, Meredith Jean Black, Naomi Black, Robert G.Blackadar, Robert H.Blackburn, John D.Blackwell, Eleanor M.Blain, Alex M.Blair, Robert Blair, Andre Blais, Phyllis R.Blakeley, J.Sherman Bleakney, Bertram C.Blevis, Lawrence C.Bliss, Michael Bliss, E.D.Blodgett, Jean Blodgett, Hans Blohm, Ronald Bloor, Arthur W.Blue, A.Blyth, Robin W.Boadway, David A.Boag, Ruby Boardman, Douglas H.Bocking, Jack Boddington, Trevor Boddy, John M.Bodner, George J.Boer, James P.Bogart, Jean Sutherland Boggs, Tibor Bognar, Gilles Boileau, Aurelien Boivin, Bernard Boivin, Jean Boivin, Geoffrey Bokovany, Andre Bolduc, Yves Bolduc, Glen W.Boles*, Francis W.P.Bolger, Kenneth E.Bollinger, George Bonavia, Courtney C.J.Bond, Flint Bondurant, Joseph Bonenfant, Gayle Bonish, Roy Bonisteel, Rudy Boonstra, W.Hanson Boorne, Rodney M.Booth, Paul M.Boothe, Paul-Emil Borduas, Robert Bothwell*, Robert D.Bott, Randy Bouchard, Michel A.Boucher, Gilles Boulet, Roger H.Boulet, Doug Boult, Andre G.Bourassa, Nicole Bourbonnais, Pierre L.Bourgault, John Brian Bourne, Patricia E.Bovey, A.J.Bowen, Lynne E.Bowen, Wilbur Fee Bowker, Roy T.Bowles, Hartwell Bowsfield, Christine Boyanoski, Farrell M.Boyce, John Boyd, Oliver A.Bradt, William J.Brady, Chris Braiden, F.Gerald Brander, Guy R.Brassard, Ted J.Brasser, Bernard Brault, R.Matthew Bray*, J.A.Breck, David H.Breen*, Francois Bregha, Sidney Bregman, Willard Brehaut*, J.William Brennan, Paul W.Brennan, Raymond Breton, Roland Brideau, Harry John Bridgman, John E.C.Brierley*, Jean L.Briggs, David R.Brillinger, Jack Brink, Ralph O.Brinkhurst, Robert Brisebois, Aldo Brochet, Andre Brochu, Irwin M.Brodo, Somer Brodribb, Alan A.Brookes, Ian A.Brookes, Bill Brooks, David B.Brooks, Robert S.Broughton, Yvs Brousseau, Walt Browarny, D.P.Brown, David Brown, Desmond H.Brown*, E.Brown, Jennifer S.H.Brown*, Richard G.B.Brown*, Robert Craig Brown, Roy I.Brown, Thomas E.Brown, Don R.Brownell, Lorne D.Bruce, Fred Bruemmer, John H.Brumley, Alan G.Brunger, Reinhart A.Brust, Rorke Bardon Bryan, Giles Bradley Bryant, Thomas A.Brzustowki, [--?--] Buache, Norman Buchignani, Ruth Matheson Buck, Phillip A.Buckner*, Geoff Budden, Susan Buggey, Lise Buisson, Paul Buitenhuis, John Bullen, J.M.Bumsted*, Jim Burant, Patricvk H.Burden, Joan Burke, Robert D.Burke, Jean Burnet, David Burnett*, Marilyn Schiff Burnett*, Dorothy K.Burnham, Eedson Louis Millard Burns, Michael Burns, Robert J.Burns, Robin Burns, Ian Burton, Jack Bush, Paul Buteux, Frank Taylor Butler, K.Jack Butler, Margaret Butschler, Edward Butts, Robert E.Butts, Marcel Cadotte, Gordon F.Callahan, John C.Callaghan, John W.Callahan, June Callwood, Lorraine Camerlain, Bill Cameron, Christina Cameron, Duncan Cameron, Elspeth Cameron, James M.Cameron, Wendy Cameron*, A.Barrie Campbell, Beverly Campbell, Douglas F.Campbell, Gordon Campbell, Ian A.Campbell, J.Milton Campbell, Jack J.R.Campbell, Neil John Campbell, Percy I.Campbell, Sandra Campbell, Richard Campion, William T.Cannon, Pierre Cantin, Usher Caplan, Emily F.Carasco, Clifton F.Carbin, Douglas Cardinal, Patrick R.T.Cardy, Thomas H.Carefoot, J.M.S.Careless*, Gilles Carle, Jock Alan Carlisle, Franklin Carmichael, Derek Caron, Laurent G.Caron, Carole H.Carpenter, Ken Carpenter, Emily Carr, Gaston Carriere, Carman V.Carroll, Jock Carroll, Brian G.Carter, George E.Carter, Margaret Carter, Richard J.Cashin, Ian Casselman, Maureen Cassidy, George Catlin, Michel Cauchon, Paul B.Cavers*, Richard Chabot, Roland Chagnon, Jim Chalmers, Roger Chamberland, Edward J.Chambers, Francis J.Chambers, James K.Chambers, Robert D.Chambers, D.H.Champ(?), Guy Champagne, Michel Champagne*, James K.Chapman, John D.Chapman, Louis Charbonneau, John Charles, Murray N.Charlton, L.Margaret Chartrand, Luc Chatrand, Rene Chartrand, Brian D.E.Chatterton, Gilles Chausse, Rick Checkland, Michel Vincent Cheff, Nancy Miller Chenier, Anselme Chiasson, Zeonon Chiasson, Walter R.Childers, Peter D.Chimbos, Blair Ching, Alexander J.Chisholm, Elspeth Chisholm, Robert Choquette, Catherine D.Chorniawy, Diana Chown, Jean Chretien, Timothy J.Christian, William E.Christian, Carl A.Christie, G.L.Christie, Innis Christie, Jim Christopher, B.Bert Chubey, Charles Stephen Churcher*, Janet Chute, S.Donald C.Chutter, Jacques Cinq-Mars, V.Claerhout, John J.Clague, Michael Thomas Clandinin, A.McFadyen Clark, Howard C.Clark, Lovell C.Clark*, Paraskeva Clark, Robert H.Clark, Andrew Clark, Howard C.Clark, Kenneth R.Clark, Lovell C.Clark, Paraskeva Clark, Robert H.Clark, T.Alan Clark, Thomas H.Clark, Wesley J.Clark, R.Allyn Clarke, Stephen Clarkson, Wallace Clement, Nathalie Clerk*, Norman Clermont, Yves W.Clermont, Howard Clifford, William L.Clink, Richard T.Clippingdae, W.J.Clouston, Nicole Cloutier, Gigi Clowes, Brian W.Coad, John P.Coakley, Donna Coates, Kenneth S.Coates, Bente Roed Cochran, James P.Cockburn, C.Cockroft, William James Cody, Dale R.Cogswell, Fred Cogswell, Stanley A.Cohen, Bruce Cohoon, Susan G.Cole, James Coleman, Patricia H.Coleman, Elizabeth Collard, Paulette Collet, Malcolm M.C.Collins, Helen Fabia Collinson, John Robert Colombo*, Charles Comfort, Alan Conboy, Odette Condemine, David R.Conn, M.Patricia Connelly, James T.H.Connor, Leonard W.Conolly, Robert J.Conover*, Margaret Conrad, A.Brandon Conron, Brian E.Conway, F.Graham Cooch, Eung-Do Cook, Francis R.Cook, Kennon Cooke, O.A.Cooke, Owen Cooke, Heather Cooper, Gordon William Cope, Murray J.Copeland, Brent Copley, John R.D.Copley, Pierre Corbeil, Frank Corcoran, J.Clement Cormier, Paul Grant Cornell, Peter M.Cornell, Vincenzo Coronelli, Frank Cosentino*, Ronald L.Cosper, Francoise Cote, Jean G.Cote, Mark Cote, Jacques Cotnam, Rebecca Priegert Coulter, Robert T.Coupland, Thomas J.Courchene, John J.Courtney, Sally Coutts, John J.Cove, Jeff G.Cowan, Harold G.Coward, Bruce Cox, Diane Wilson Cox, Michael F.Crabb*, Laurence Harold Cragg, George Craig, Mary M.Craig*, Terrence L.Craig, Ian K.Crain, Brian A.Crane, David Crane, John L.Cranmer-Byng, Donald A.Cranstone, David L.Craven, Roy D.Crawford, Judith Crawley, Tim Creery, Philippe Crine, Harold Crookell, John Crosby*, Michael S.Cross, Diane Crossley, E.J.Crossman, Omer Croteau, A.David Crowe, Jean Margaret Crowe, Keith Jeffray Crowe, Ronald B.Crowe, David M.Cruden, David A.Cruickshank, Ken Cruickshank, Paul E.Crunican, Rudolf P.Cujes, Maurice Cullen, Bruce Gordon Cumming, Carman W.Cumming, Leslie Merrill Cumming, Doug Curran, Philip J.Currie, Raymond F.Currie, Walter A.Curtin*, Christopher G.Curtis*, Edward S.Curtis, James E.Curtis, Leonard J.Cusack, Maurice Cutler, Jerome S.Cybulski, Michael Czubokal, Joachim B.Czypionka, Anne Innis Dagg, Lorraine G.D'Agincourt, Edward H.Dahl, Hallvard Dahlie, Moshie E.Dahms, Hugh Monro Dale, Ralph Dale, John H.Dales, Micheline D'Allaire, F.Dally, D.Daly, Eric W.Daly, Nathaniel Dance, Pierre Dansereau, Ruth Danys, Regna Darnell, Hugh A.Daubeny, Paul Davenport, Frank Davey, Gilbert David, Helene David, Peter P.David, William A.B.Davidson, Adriana A.Davies, Gwendolyn Davies, Jim Davies, John A.Davies, Ken Davies, Thomas Davies, Ann Davis, Chuck Davis, Richard C.Davis, Vicki L.Davis, James D.Davison, Michael J.Dawe, John M.Day, Lawrence Day, Barbara K.Deans, Philip Dearden, Chris DeBresson, Theod De Bry, Malcolm Graeme Decarie, Samuel De Champlain, Bart F.Deeg, Ronald K.Deeprose, James V.DeFelice, Nicolas De Fer, C.G.Van Zyll De Jong, Nicolas J.De Jong*, Norman C.Delarue, J.De Lavoye, Vincent M.Del Buono, Guillaume Del'Isle, L.Denis Delorme, Hugh A.Dempsey, L.James Dempsey, Michael R.Dence, David Dendy, John D.Dennison, A.A.Den Otter, Dora De Pedery-Hunt, Honor De Pencier, D.De Richeterre, Jacques F.Derome, Duncan R.Derry, Ramsay Derry, Peter Desbarats, Joseph F.W.DesBarres, Pierre Desceliers, Donald Deschenes, Jean-Luc DesGranges, Andree Desilets*, Yvon Desloges, G.J.DeSorcy, Marie Jose Des Rivieres, Marquis De Tracy, MacDonald Dettwiler, John DeVisser*, Philip M.Dewan, John Dewhirst*, Lyle Dick, Lloyd Merlin Dickie, John A.Dickinson, William Trevor Dickinson, Nigel Dickson, Gera Dillon, Larry Dillon, Milan V.Dimic, Gerard Dion, Raoul Dionne, Rene Dionne, Gerald E.Dirks, Patricia G.Dirks, Richard J.Diubaldo, Murray Dobbin, Mike Dobel, A.Rodney Dobell, Diane Dodd, Donald Andrew Dodman, Audrey D.Doerr, G.C.Dohler, Allen Doiron, Claude Ernest Dolman, Louise Dompierre, Mairi Donaldson, Sue Ann Donaldson, Margaret Mary Donnelly, John Donner, Andre Donneur, Penelope B.R.Doob*, Peter K.Doody, Joyce Doolittle, Anthony H.J.Dorsey, Yvon Dore, Gilles Dorian, John B.Dossetor, Lydia Dotto, Roger A.Doucet, Leonard A.Doucette, Charles Dougall, Jane L.Dougan, Charles Douglas, David H.Douglas, W.A.B.Douglas, Marguerite R.Dow, William F.Dowbiggin, R.Keith Downey, Arthur T.Doyle*, Denzil J.Doyle, James Doyle, Richard J.Doyle, Pierre Doyon, Sharon Drache, Derek C.Drager, Bronwyn Drainie, Wilhelmina M.Drake, D.Wayne Draper, James A.Draper, Nandor Fred Dreisziger, Leo Driedger, Kenneth F.Drinkwater, Bernadette Driscoll, Jean-Pierre Drolet, Glenn Drover, Ian M.Drummond, R.Norman Drummond, Jean E.Dryden, Patrick D.Drysdale, Jean-Marie M.Dubois*, James R.Dubro, Leo Ducharme, Raymond Duchesne*, Francois Duchesneau, Jean-Marcel Duciaume, Madeleine Ducrocq-Poirier, Dennis Duffy, Claude Duflos, Walter W.Duley, Gaston Dulong, Francois Dumont, Micheline Dumont, M.J.Dunbar, Graham W.Duncan, Neil J.Duncan, Robert H.Dunham, Marilyn E.Dunlop, Brian Leigh Dunnigan, A.Davidson Dunton, Jean R.Duperreault, Jean-Claude Dupont, Serge Marc Durflinger, Rene Durocher, Gabriel Dussault, Charles Dutoit, O.P.Dwived, Noel Dyck, Charles C.Dyer, James G.Dykes, John A.Eager, William A.Eager, John A.Eagle, Peter R.Eakins, Ross A.Eaman, Harry C.Eastman, Colin Eatock, Dorothy Harley Eber, William John Eccles*, Christine Eddie, E.V.Eddie, Charles Edenshaw, Arnold Edinborough, Oliver Edward Edwards, Peggy Edwards, Roger B.Ehrhardt, Margrit Eichler, Neil Einarson, Wilfred L.Eisnor, R.Bruce Elder, Jean Elford, Peter Douglas Elias, E.Elice, Michael Elie, C.W.J.Eliot, Bruce S.Elliott, David R.Elliott, James A.Elliott, Marie Elliott, David Ellis, Kosso Eloul, John A.Elson, George Emery, Donald W.Emmerson, Douglas B.Emmons, Maurice Emond, William F.Empey, Mike Emre, John R.English*, Murray W.Enkin, Philip C.Enros, Frank H.Epp, Isaac Erb, Robert Bruce Erb, Arthur Erickson, Glen E.Erikson, Anthony J.Erskine, Sorel Etrog, Brian L.Evans, David K.Evans*, John Evans, W.F.J.Evans, Ivan Eyre, William Faden, Joe Fafard, Curtis Fahey, Valerie J.Fall, A.Murray Fallis, Peter V.Fankboner, D.M.L.Farr*, Dorothy M.Farr, Fred Farrell, Giuseppe Fassio, George D.Fawcett, Alison Feder, Sergey Fedoroff, Margery Fee, Kevin O'Brien Fehr, William Feindel, Seth R.Feldman, Donald Fenna, William O.Fennell, M.Brock Fenton, Terry L.Fenton, Bob Ferguson, Howard L.Ferguson, Mary W.Ferguson*, J.D.Fernie, Jean Ferron, Douglas Fetherling*, Menno Fieguth, George Field, John L.Field, Richard Henning Field, Robert Field, Leonard M.Findlay, Judith Fingard, Howard R.Fink, Alvin Finkel, Maxwell Finklestein, Douglas A.Finlayson*, Gerard Finley, Gerard Finn, Christine Firth, Douglas J.Fisher, Richard S.Fisher, Robin Fisher, Stan C.Fisher, John Walter Fitsell, Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald, Patrick J.Fitzgerald, Tim Fitzharris*, David H.Flaherty, Thomas Flanagan, Allan R.Fleming, Elizabeth A.Fleming, R.B.Fleming, Robert J.Fleming, Sandford Fleming, David B.Flemming, Marilyn G.Flitton, Halle Flygare, Pieter A.Folkens, David G.Fong, Max L.Foran, Ernest R.Forbes, R.E.Forbes, William B.Forbes, Richard G.Forbis, Dennis P.Forcese, Anne Rochon Ford, Clifford Ford, Derek C.Ford, Gillian Ford, Susan Ford, Bertrand Forest, Ronald W.Forrester, Warren D.Forrester, Eugene Alfred Forsey, Frank R.Forsyth, Peter A.Forsyth, Claire-Andree Fortin, Gerald Fortin, Charles N.Forward, William F.Forward, Brian F.Foss, Franklin L.Foster, J.Bristol Foster, John Bellamy Foster, John E.Foster*, Michael K.Foster, Glenn B.Foulds, Nancy Brown Foulds, Edith M.Fowke, Marian Fowler, Charlie Fox, Paul W.Fox, Richard C.Fox, Rosemary J.Fox, Daniel Francis*, Diane Francis(?), David Frank, Julius F.Frank, Colin Athel Franklin, C.E.S.Franks, David Fransen, Robert T.Franson, Arman Frappier(?), Jorge Frascara, David Fraser, John A.Fraser, Kathleen D.J.Fraser, Robert Lochiel Fraser*, Pierre Frechette, Howard Townley Fredeen, Benjamin Freedman, Gordon Russel Freeman, Mac Freeman, Milton M.R.Freeman, Minnie Aodla Freeman, Roger D.Freeman, Walter H.P.Freitag, Carey French, Hugh M.French, Elizabeth Frey, James S.Frideres, Gerald Friesen, James D.Friesen, Jean M.Friesen, Jimmie Frise, Stanley Brice Frost, Adam G.Fuerstenberg, Robert Fulford, Anthony M.Fuller, George R.Fuller, William A.Fuller, Carol W.Fullerton, Douglas H.Fullerton, Ian F.Furniss, Richard W.Fyfe*, William S.Fyfe, Rene Robert Gadacz*, Chad Gaffield, David P.Gagan, Michel Gagne, Clarence Gagnon, Francois-Marc Gagnon, Victor Gaizauskas, Claude Galarneau, Peggy Gale, Gerald L.Gall, Daniel T.Gallacher, Paul Gallagher, Strome Galloway, John Alexander Galt, Natarajan Ganapathy, Herman Ganzevoort, Charles Gardet, David E.Gardner*, Eve Gardner, Norman Gardner, Ron Gardner, Ron Garnett, Christopher J.R.Garrett, John F.Garrett, Jane Gaskell, Alain Gautier, Lise Gauvin, M.J.Gauvin, Brian Gavriloff, Mary Louise Gay, Hugh J.Gayler, Douglas A.Geekie, John Grigsby Geiger, Valerius Geist*, John Gellner, Paul Gendreau, Ghislain Gendron, Julia Gersovitz, Trisha Gessler, Ian A.L.Getty, Elmer N.Ghostkeeper(?), Jacques R.Giard, Richard A.Gibb, Sandra Gibb, Kenneth M.Gibbons, Graeme Gibson, James A.Gibson, Lee Gibson, William C.Gibson, Perry James Giffen, Peter Giffen, Elizabeth Hollingsworth Gignac, Richard Giguere, C.W.Gilchrist, J.N.Giles, John Patrick Gillese, Beryl C.Gillespie, Bill Gillespie,Laurence J.P.Gillespie, John M.Gillett, Margaret Gillett, Robert Peter Gillis, Geraldine Gilliss, Alan M.Gillmor, Cedric Gillot, Norbert Gilmore, J.C.Gilson, Yves Gingras, Andre Girouard, J.Gleadah, Burton Glendenning, Michael Gnarowski, David J.Goa, Barbara J.T.Godard, Ensley A.Godby, W.Earl Godfrey, William G.Godfrey, R.Bruce Godwin, Cy Gonick, Cecilia A.Gonzales, Bryan N.S.Gooch, S.James Gooding, Jerry Goodis, John T.Goodman, R.G.Goold, Arthur S.Goos, Paul A.Goranson, Anne Gordon, Donald J.C.Gordon, Glenn Gordon, Stanley Gordon, Walter L.Gordon, Deborah Gorham, Harriet R.Gorham, Stanley W.Gorham, Calvin Carl Gotlieb, Daniel H.Gottesman, Barry Morton Gough, Joseph B.Gough, Judy Gouin, Allan M.Gould*, Henri Goulet(?), Benoit-Beaudry Gourd*, James Iain Gow, Alan Gowans, Linda Gowens-Crane, J.Wesley Graham, Jane E.Graham, John F.Graham, Katherine A.Graham, Roger Graham, E.H.Grainger, J.L.Granatstein*, Alix Granger, Luc Granger, Frank Grant, John A.G.Grant, John Webster Grant, Peter Grant*, Ted Grant, Barry Gray, Carolyn Elizabeth Gray, David F.Gray, David Robert Gray, Earle Gray*, G.Ronald Gray, James T.Gray, Stephen Grsay, D'Arcy M.Greaves, Harold V.Green, Janet Green, John Paul Green, Leslie C.Green, Melvyn Green, Richard Green, Reesa Greenberg, John P.Greene, Thomas B.Greenfield(?), Pauline Greenhill(?), Brereton Greenhous*, John Edward Ross Greenshields, Hugh J.Greenwood, Allan Greer, Arthur E.Gregg, E.David Gregory, Patrick T.Gregory, Robert W.Gregory, Julius H.Grey, Norman T.Gridgeman, Foster J.K.Griezic, Herbert Lawrence Griffin, John D.M.Griffin, Anthony J.F.Griffiths, Barry Griffiths, Derek Griffiths, Graham C.D.Griffiths, Naomi E.S.Griffiths, Sergio Grinstein, Yolande Grise(?), Deanna Groetzinger, Jack W.Grove, Robert G.Grubel, Patrick D.Gruber, Hans E.Gruen, Terry Guernsey, Dennis Guest, Hal J.Guest*, Tee Lamont Guidotti, Armand Guilmette, Bernadette Guilmette, H.Pearson Gundy, Kristjana Gunnars, S.W.Gunner, Harry Emmet Gunning, W.Gush, Allan Guy, Julian Gwyn, Richard J.Gwyn, Peter P.C.Haanappel, Erich Haber, Carlotta Hacker, Jim Hackler, Yvonne Y.Haddad, Michael L.Hadley, Keith D.Hage, J.Haigh, G.Brenton Haliburton, Anthony J.Hall, David J.Hall, Frederick A.Hall, Jim Hall, John W.Hall, Roger Hall, Mary E.Hallett, Hugh A.Halliday, Ian Halliday, Mary Halloran, Gerald Hallowell, Beryl M.Hallworth, Francess G.Halpenny, Marjorie M.Halpin, E.J.Hamacher, Vincent Carl Hamacher, George Frederick Hamann, Theophile Hamel, Louis-Edmond Hamelin, Donald G.Hamilton, J.Hamilton, Rolf Hamilton, S.W.Hamilton, Sally A.Hamilton, William B.Hamilton, Michael C.Hampson, Brent M.Hamre, Geoffrey Hancock, Lyn Hancock, Piers Handling, James Hanrahan, Asbjorn T.Hansen, John D.Harbron, Peter Harcourt, David F.Hardwick, Jean-Pierre Hardy, Rene Hardy, F.Kenneth Hare, Clara Hargittay, J.Anthony Hargreaves, Gordon Harland(?), Alex M.Harper, J.Russell Harper*, Richard Harrington, G.J.Harris, Gretchen L.H.Harris, James A.Harris, Lawren Harris, Peter Harris, Robert Cole Harris, Stephen Harris*, Stuart A.Harris, Walter E.Harris, William E.Harris, Lionel G.Harrison, Paul J.Harrison, Tom Harrison, Ted Hart, Peter J.Harte, Al Harvey, David D.Harvey, Fred J.Hatch, Wilbert O.Haufe, Lutz Haufschild, Jo Hauser, V.Tony Hauser, Ronald G.Haycock*, Michael Hayden, Florence C.Hayes, David M.Hayne, Robert H.Haynes, Carol Hayter, Henry F.Heald, Trevor D.Heaver, Harvey D.Hebb, Richard J.Hebda, Gerard Hebert, Louis-Philippe Hebert, Robert A.Hedlin, Conrad E.Heidenreich, Frederick M.Helleiner, Rudolph A.Helling, June Helm, Bruce S.Heming, Odile Henault, Alex Henderson, William B.Henderson, Tom Hendry, E.Henn, Ralph L.Hennessy, Jacques Henripin, A.S.Henry, Michael M.Henry, Yude M.Henteloff, Alec Herbert, Frank A.Herbert, George Heriot, Alex W.Herman, Harry Vjekoslav Herman, Craig Heron*, Don J.Herperger, Stephen M.Herrero, Robert Hesketh, Ingo Hessel, Phillip Hewett, Irving Hexham, Benedykt Heydenkorn, Edward S.Hickcox, Michael Hickman, Donald Higgins, David Higgs, Joseph Highmore, Dahn D.Higley, Walter Hildebrandt, Charles Christie Hill, Harry M.Hill, Tom Hill, James K.Hiller*, Anne Trowell Hillmer*, Norman Hillmer*, W.G.R.Hind, Ole Hindsgaul, Sherman Hines, Akira Hirose, Carolyn Hlus, Helen Hobbs, R.Gerald Hobbs, Gilles Hocquart, John Edwin Hodgett*, Bruce W.Hodgins, J.W.Hodgins, Judith F.M.Hoeniger, J.J.Hogan, Helen Sawyer Hogg, A.Holbrook, J.A.Holden, A.W.Holdstock, Gerald Holdsworth, K.Tony Hollihan, H.T.Holman, C.Janet Holmes, Jeffrey Holmes, John W.Holmes, W.Holmes, Eric J.Holmgren*, S.Homer, Alvin George Hong, Robert Hood, Frances Ann Hopkins, Robin Hopper, Peter Hopwood, Charles Horetzky, Michiel Horn, Arthur E.C.Horne, Stan W.Horrall, Alan S.Hourston, [--?--] Housden, C.Stuart Houston*, James Houston, J.G.Howard, Ross K.Howard, Victor M.Howard, Colin D.Howell, Julie O.Hrapko, Douglas P.Hube, Jayne Huddleston, Raymond Hudon, Douglas R.Hudson, Raymond J.A.Huel, Fred Huffman, Richard David Hughes, J.David Hulchanski, Elizabeth Hulse, William Humber*, Stephen Hume, Monte Hummel, Jack Humphrey, Charles W.Humphries, Edward William Humphrys, Robert F.Hunka, Geoffrey Hunt, John R.Hunt, Tony Hunt, Kenneth E.Hunter, Robert Hunter, Mel Hurtig, Mervyn J.Huston, Linda Hutcheon, Gerald M.Hutchinson, Roger C.Hutchinson, Richard J.Huyda, A.M.J.Hyatt, Doreen Marie Indra, Elizabeth Ingolfsrud, Avrom Isaacs, Colin F.W.Isaacs, Bill Ivy, David Jackel, Susan Jackel*, Sydney W.Jackman, A.Y.Jackson, Bernard S.Jackson, Graham Jackson, Harold Jackson, John D.Jackson, John James Jackson, John N.Jackson, Lionel E.Jackson, Robert J.Jackson, Roger C.Jackson, Stephen O.Jackson, Ronny Jacques, Cornelius J.Jaenen*, Donna James, Ellen S.James, Ross D.James*, Sheilagh S.Jameson, Margie Jamieson, Stuart M.Jamieson, Hudson N.Janisch, Christian T.L.Janssen, Lorraine L.Janus, Richard A.Jarrell, Marguerite Jean, Dennis W.Jeanes, Alan H.Jeeves, C.W.Jefferys, Thomas Jefferys, Robert Jekyll, Michael Jenkin, Phyllis Marie Jensen, Vickie D.Jensen, Jane Jenson(?), L.Martin Jerry, Alan M.Jessop, Dean Jobb, Louis Jobin, Jan C.Jofriet, Peter Johansen, Timothy Johns, Walter H.Johns, Dennis Johnson, J.K.Johnson, Peter Wade Johnson, Robert E.Johnson, W.O.Vic Johnson, Alex Johnston, C.Fred Johnston, Charles M.Johnston, Frances E.M.Johnston, Franz H.Johnston, Hugh Johnston, Richard Johnston, W.Stafford Johnston, William Johnston, Marcel Jomphe, Brian Jones, David C.Jones, David Phillip Jones, Elwood Hugh Jones, Gaynor G.Jones, Laura Jones, Raymond E.Jones, Richard A.Jones*, Alan V.Jopling, Frederic Waistfall Jopling, Colin Jose, Neal R.Jotham, Peter Jull, [--?--] Jurotsky, Claude Jutra, Nick Kach, Richard Kadulski, Joseph Kage, A.A.Kahil, Patricia Kaiser, Warren E.Kalbach, Henry Kalen, Stephan Felix Kaliski(?), Helmut Kallman, Karen Dazelle Kallweit, Harold D.Kalman, A.N.Kamal, Paul Kane, Joseph W.Kanuka, George Kapelos, Martha Kaplan, Ruth Kaplan, William Edward Kaplan, Isabel Kaprielian, Urjo Kareda, Malak Karsh, Yousuf Karsh, Peter Karsten, Elinor Mary Kartzmark, Naim Kattan, Anhrlica Kauffmann, Martin L.Kaufmann, Leslie S.Kawamura, Gregory S.Kealey*, David R.Keane, King S.Kearns, Michael J.Keen, David L.Keenlyside, Elaine Keillor, W.J.Keith, William Stirling Keizer*, Frances C.Kelley, Louis Gerard Kelly, David D.Kemp, Walter H.Kemp, Kay Kendall, John Edward Kendle, Dorothy Kennedy, J.E.Kennedy, John L.Kennedy*, Mark B.Kennedy, Elizabeth H.Kennell, Stephen A.Kent, John A.C.Kentfield, John P.B.Kenyon, Walter A.Kenyon, Kenneth Kernaghan, Lois Kathleen Kernaghan*, Adam J.Kerr, Gordon R.Kerr, Robert B.Kerr, Stephen R.Kerr, Andre Kertesz, Paula Kestelman, Jean-Pierre Kesteman, Wilfred H.Kesterton, Keith S.Ketchen, Douglas Keith McEwan Kevan, Peter G.Kevan(?), J.E.Michael Kew, John Keyes, Bruce Kidd, Thomas W.Kierans, Gerald Killan, Bill J.King, M.G.Kingshott, Ray A.Kingsmith, Colin Kirk, Stanislav J.Kirschbaum, John James Kirton, Eleanor M.Kish, Walter Klaassen, Murray S.Klamkin, Lewis N.Klar, Harold R.Klinck, Robert B.Klymasz, Richard W.Knapton, Judith Knelman, Alan R.Knight, David B.Knight, Dorothy Knowles, Robert Hugh Knowles, Stephen T.Knowles, Brian M.Knudsen, Eric Koch, Franz M.Koennecke, Wray E.Koepke, Lilly Koltun, Balthazar Korab, Paul M.Koroscil, J.Anthony Koslow, Myrna Anne Kostash, Tony Kot, Vladimir J.Krajina, Kate Kranck, Stephen J.Kraseman, Cheryl L.Krasnick, Peter V.Krats, J.A.Kraulis*, Charles J.Krebs, F.Henry Krenz, Erwin Kreutzweiser, Cornelius Krieghoff, Andrea Kristof, Arthur Kroker, Eva-Marie Kroller, Martin Krossel, Karol J.Krotki, Larry L.Kulisek, Walter O.Kupsch, William Kurelek, Eva M.Kushner, Ernie Kuyt*, David Kwavnick, C.Ian Kyar, Micheline Labelle, Danielle Laberge, Michele Lacombe*, [--?--] La Cosa, Estelle Lacoursiere*, Laurier Lacroix*, Michel Laferriere, Guy Lafrance, Raymond J.Lahey, William G.Laidlaw, Mabel H.Laine*, Dennis Laing, Gertrude M.Laing, Claude Lajeunesse, G.-Raymond Laliberte, Andre N.Lalonde, Gerard L.Lalonde, W.Kaye Lamb, Geoffrey Lambert, H.Lambert, James H.Lambert, George E.Lammers, Yvan Lamonde, Marc Lamontagne, Peter Lancaster, R.Brian Land, Pierre Landreville, Kenneth Landry, John D.Landstreet, E.David Lane, Robert B.Lane, Robert P.Langlands, Carmen Langlois, Wayne Lankinen, Robert Lansdale, Karlis O.Lapins, Pierre Louis Lapointe, Eleanor R.Laquian, Peter Anthony Larkin, Jean B.D.Larmour, Emma D.LaRocque, George H.La Roi, Andre Larose, Serge Larose, Jeanette Larouche, Edward N.Larter, Pierre LaSalle, Daniel Latouche*, Viviane F.Launay, Gerard Laurence, Karen Laurence, Marc Laurendeau, Michael Lauzon, Omer Lavallee, Kathleen Laverty*, Kenneth R.Lavery, Marie Lavigne, Patricia Johnston Lavigueur(?), Leslie M.Lavkulich, Paul Lavoie, Pierre Lavoie, Charles Law, John Lawson, Don G.Law-West, Jim Laxer, Arleigh H.Laycock, David H.Laycock, Richard E.C.Layne, Marvin Lazerson, John R.N.Lazier, Fred Lebensold, Hugues LeBlanc, Charles P.Leblond, Paul H.LeBlond, Sylvio LeBlond, Antonio Lechasseur*, Donald J.Lecraw, Johanne Ledoux, Fernand Leduc, Laurence LeDuc, Ozias Leduc, Rene Leduc-Park, David Lee, John Alan Lee, Michael J.Lee, Robin Leech, John G.Leefe, Joseph Legare, Marthe Legault, Camille Legendre, Russel D.Legge, Robert F.Legget*, J.Mark Leier, Doug Leighton, Jean M.Leiper, Michel Lemaire, Jean-Paul Lemay, Clement Lemelin(?), Maurice Lemelin, Pierre H.Lemieux, Raymond U.Lemieux, Vincent Lemieux, Guy Lemire, Maurice Lemire, Robert Lemire, Dorothy A.Lenarsic, Jos L.Lennards, Frank Lennon, John Lennox, David W.Leonard, Yvan G.Lepage, Donald J.Le Roy, Rodney L.LeRoy, Peter M.Leslie, M.Claude Lessard, Barry H.Lesser, Carol Anne Letheren, Victor Levant, Trevor H.Levere, Bruce D.Levett, Malcolm Levin, Allan E.Levine, Gilbert Levine, Ron Levine, Joseph Levitt, Sheldon J.Levitt, Brian S.Lewis, Douglas L.Lewis, John B.Lewis, Joyce C.Lewis, Laurie Lewis, Sophie Lewis, Walter Lewis, Joel Lexchin, Elliott H.Leyton, James W.Lightbody, Norman R.Lightfoot, Jack N.Lightstone, Gary M.Lindberg, Ernest Lindner, Evert E.Lindquist, Peter L.Lindsay, Joseph D.Lindsey, Paul-Andre Linteau, Mary Jane Lipkin, Arthur Lismer, Marilyn Lister, Rota Herzberg Lister, John W.Y.Lit, Moe M.Litman, E.Livernois, Donna Livingstone, Douglas G.Lochhead, Carl J.Lochnan*, Anthony R.Lock, Jack L.Locke, Gulbrand Loken, D.Edwards Loney, Kathleen Lord, James Lorimer, Frances Loring, Marcel Lortie, Arthur Loughton, Laurence Dale Lovick, Raymond Nicholson Lowes, Peter J.M.Lown, W.Mark Lowry, Edward P.Lozowski*, Frere Luc, David Paul Lumsden, Harry G.Lumsden, Ian Gordon Lumsden, Chris Lund, John Lund, Manoly R.Lupul, Real Lussier, John M.Lyle, John Goodwin Lyman, Gerald Lynch, Wayne Lynch, Deborah Maryth Lyon*, G.F.Lyon, John David Lyon, William I.Macadam, J.Malcolm Macartney, Terence Macartney-Filgate, Hugh MacCallum, Ian MacCallum, Cathy Macdonald, G.Edward MacDonald, Heather MacDonald*, J.E.H.MacDonald, Les MacDonald, Martha MacDonald, R.H.Macdonald, R.St.J.MacDonald, Roderick A.Macdonald, Stewart D.MacDonald, Valerie Isabel Macdonald, Margaret MacDonnell(?), April J.MacDougall, Heather MacDougall, Laurel Sefton MacDowell, Thomas F.Mace, Grant MacEwan, Royce MacGillivray, James G.MacGregor, Joseph B.MacInnis, Tessa MacIntosh, Daniel S.C.Mackay, David Clark MacKenzie, Heather M.Mackenzie, Robert C.MacKenzie, Ross G.MacKenzie, William C.MacKenzie, William Francis Mackey, George O.Mackie, C.S.Mackinnon, Frank MacKinnon, William R.MacKinnon, Bruce B.MacLachlan, Roy MacLaren, Colin MacLean, Raymond A.MacLean, Gordon W.MacLennan, Kenneth Ogilvie MacLeod, Malcolm MacLeod, Pegi Nicol MacLeod, Roderick C.Macleod, Carrie MacMillan(?), David S.MacMillan, Keith MacMillan, Stuart R.MacMillan, Andrew H.Macpherson, Duncan Macpherson, Ian MacPherson*, Kay Macpherson, Roger W.Macqueen, Donald A.MacRae, Dennis Frank Keith Madill, Anthony A.Magnin,Roger Magnuson, Warren Magnuson, Gilles-D.Mailhiot, Laurent Mailhot*, Pierre Mailhot*, J.S.Maini, Lise Maisonneuve, Jean-Louis Major, Robert Major, Peter Malkin, David Malloch, Cedric R.Mann, Kenneth H.Mann, Martha Mann, John J.Mannion, Kate L.Mansell, J.R.Marchand, Anthony Mardiros, Leo Margolis, Salomon Marion, Shew-Kuey Mark, Philip De Lacey Markham, William E.Markham, William L.Marr, James H.Marsh*, John S.Marsh*, Roy Marsh, Douglas Marshall, J.Stewart Marshall, Victor W.Marshall, Horst Martin(?), J.Douglas Martin, Jean-Claude Martin, John E.H.Martin, Kathy M.Martin, Sandra Martin, Andre Martineau(?), May L.Maskow, Allan M.Maslove, R.W.Masswohl, Donald C.Masters, Perry Mastrovito, C.W.Mathers, John Ross Matheson, R.Neil Matheson, William A.Matheson, Robin D.Mathews, William G.Mathewson, Thomas Mathien, John R.Mathieson, Jacques Mathieu, Keith Matthews, John S.Matthiasson, David Mattison, Mary McDougall Maude*, Jean Mauger, Christopher J.Maule, A.R.Maurer, Valerie J.May, Valerie L.May, John Maybank*, Paul F.Maycock, Jack Maze, R.Ann McAfee, Don E.McAllister, William J.McAndrew, D.S.McBean, W.A.E.McBryde, Christina McCall, Douglas McCalla, Margaret Elizabeth McCallum, Lawrence D.McCann*, S.B.McCann, Bennett McCardle, Peter J.McCart, [--?--] McCarter, Michael J.McCarthy, Catharine McClellan, P.McCloskey, W.H.McConnell, A.Ross McCormack, Jane McCracken, Harvey A.McCue, James A.W.McCulloch, A.B.McCullough, Linda McDermott, Michael McDonald, Allan K.McDougall, Anne McDougall*, John N.McDougall, Robert L.McDougall, Duncan McDowall, Alec C.McEwen, Freeman L.McEwen, K.D.McFadden, Clark A.McFadyen(?), Jean McFall, Tom McFeat, Elizabeth W.McGahan, Harold Franklin McGee, Timothy J.McGee, Robert McGhee*, William B.McGill(?), Donald G.McGillivray, Roderick Alan McGinn, Janice Dickin McGinnis*, Margaret McGregor(?), Pauline McGregor, Peter T.McGuigan, Eric McGuinness, Dave McIntosh, W.John McIntyre, Alexander G.McKay, Gordon A.McKay, J.Alex McKeague, John McKee, Ruth McKendry, Barbara A.McKenna, Brian McKenna, Ruth McKenzie, Rita McKeough, A.Brian McKillop*, J.McLachlan, Angus McLaren, Ian A.McLaren, Norman McLaren, Kenneth M.McLaughlin, Catherine M.McLay, A.Anne McLellan, Cam McLeod(?), Doug McLeod, Elizabeth McLuhan, Gerald R.McMaster, Barclay McMillan*, Donald Burleigh McMillan, Michael McMordie*, Lorraine McMullen, Stanley E.McMullin, William C.McMurray, Debra A.McNabb*, Anne McNamara, Kenneth McNaught, Martin K.McNicholl*, Jean McNulty, Hugo A.McPherson, Sandra F.McRae, King G.McShane*, Ian McTaggart-Cowan*, G.S.McTavish, Peter B.E.McVetty, Edward Watson McWhinney, Ian R.McWhinney, Stanley R.Mealing, Sheva Medjuck, Harry Medovy, Sharon P.Meen, Benoit Melancon, William H.Melody*, James R.Melvin, Joan S.Melvin, [--?--] Menkes, Don H.Meredith, Philip E.Merilees, E.M.Merrick, Jim Merrithew*, Ann Messenger, George Metcalf, David R.Metcalfe, Janis Mezaks, T.H.Glynn Michael, Jacques Michon, F.W.Micklethwaite, Tom Middlebro', Ivan Mihaychuk, James Francis Verchere Millar, A.J.Miller, Carman Miller*, Elizabeth Russell Miller, J.R.Miller, John A.Miller, Judith N.Miller, Mark Miller*, Mary Jane Miller, Orlo Miller, Leslie Millin, Peter M.Millman, Thomas R.Millman, Charles A.Mills, David Mills*, Eric L.Mills, Isabel Margaret Mills, Brian Milne, David Milne, David A.Milne, William J.Milne, Marc Milner, David G.Milton, Janice Milton, Gordon Minnes, Dale Miquelon*, Edward D.Mitchell, Ken R.Mitchell, Thomas H.Mitchell, Wendy L.Mitchinson, Dennis L.Modry, Johann W.Mohr, John S.Moir*, George Dempster Molnar, Patrick M.Moncrieff, Jacques Monet*, Ian Montagnes, D.Wayne Moodie, Barry M.Moody, Peter N.Moogk*, Kathleen A.Mooney, Christopher Moore, James G.G.Moore, Keith L.Moore, Teresa Moore, George Moppet, Gordon Morash, Kenneth Morgan, Andrew J.Moriarty, E.Alan Morinis, Pierre Morisset, Yves-Marie Morissette, Raymond Moriyama, Richard E.Morlan, J.Terence Morley, Patricia A.Morley, J.W.Morrice, Cerise Morris, Peter Morris, David A.Morrison, George R.Morrison, Jack W.Morrison, Jean Morrison*, Kenneth L.Morrison*, Rod Morrison, W.Douglas Morrison, William R.Morrison*, Norval Morrisseau, Don Morrow, Patrick A.Morrow*, Verne Morse, Desmond Morton, John K.Morton, Allan Moscovitch, John Moss, Mary Jane Mossman, Roger Motut, Graeme S.Mount, Farley Mowat, Susanne Mowat, David S.Moyer, R.Gordon Moyles, Maria Muehlen, R.D.Muir, Del A.Muise, Francis C.Muldoon, Terry David Mulligan, Robert M.Mummery, Mohiudden Munawar, R.E.Munn, J.Ian Munro, Jean Murphy, Joan Murray*, Robert G.E.Murray, Brian T.P.Mutimer, Luba Mycio, John Myles, Robert Nadeau, Vincent Nadeau(?), K.Nagai, Josephine C.Naidoo, [--?--] Nairne, George Nakash, Agnes Nanogak, A.Nantel, Roald Nasgaard, David Nash, Roger P.Nason, Susan M.Nattrass, Francis P.D.Navin, Margaret Neal, Peter Neary, H.Blair Neatby, Leslie H.Neatby, Edwin H.Neave, A.W.H.Needler, George T.Needler, James M.Neelin, Robert F.Neill, V.P.Neimanis, H.Vivian Nelles, Bert A.E.Nelson, Joseph S.Nelson, Ron Nelson, Pierre Nepveu, David N.Nettleship, Edward Peter Neufeld, Ronald W.Newfeldt, Shirley Neuman, William H.New, Michael J.Newark, Dianne Newell, David L.Newlands, Peter C.Newman, Roy Nicholls, Norman L.Nicholson*, John S.Nicks, Murray William Nicolson, N.Ole Nielsen, Jorge E.Niosi*, Thomas Nisbet, Lawrence C.Nkendirim, William C.Noble, Ib L.Nonnecke, Kenneth H.Norrie, William Notman, Barbara Novak, J.Ralph Nursall, Jim Sutcliffe Nutt, V.Walter Nuttall, Allan O'Brien, John O'Brien, Lucius O'Brien, Serge Occhietti, Jean R.O'Clery, Shane O'Dea, Ronald K.O'Dor, Jillian M.Officer*, James A.Ogilvy*, Will Ogilvy, Jean O'Grady, Timothy R.Oke, Anita Olanick, Kim Patrick O'Leary, R.V.Oleson, John J.Oliphant, Earl Olsen, Daniel O'Neill, Patrick B.O'Neill, Mario Onyszchuk, Jessie Oonark, L.D.O'Quinn, Robert R.Orford, Mark M.Orkin, Lionel Orlikow, Margaret A.Ormsby, Brian Stuart Osborne, Andre Ouellet, Fernand Ouellet, Henri Ouellet, Real Ouellet, John N.Owens*, D.R.Owram, Andrew Oxenham, Charles Pachter, John G.Packer(?), Donald M.Page, Garnet T.Page, James E.Page, Malcolm Page, Lee Paikin, Sandra Paikowsky*, Howard Pain, Michael F.Painter, Jean Palardy, Murray S.Palay, Bryan D.Palmer, Howard Palmer, Tamara Jeppson Palmer, Khayyam Zev Paltiel, Leo Panitch, Frits Pannekoek*, Gerald Ernest Panting, Jean-Marc Paradis, Jean Pariseau, Seth Park, George L.Parker, Graham E.Parker, James M.Parker, Lewis Parker, John B.Parkin, Tom W.Parkin, [Joy?] Parr, Keith Parry, John Parsons, Timothy R.Parsons, Ralph T.Pastore, Thomas H.Patching, Donald G.Paterson, Peter Paterson, W.Stan B.Paterson, E.P.Patterson, Freeman Patterson, G.James Patterson, Graeme H.Patterson, Robert S.Pattersn, Diane Paulette Payment, John G.Peacey*, Gordon B.Peacock, Frank A.Peake, Robert E.Peary, Jane H.Pease, William H.Pease, Diana Pedersen, Susan Pedwell, Bruce Peel, Frank W.Peers, Alfred Pellan, Gerard Pelletier, Jacques Pelletier, Rejean Pelletier, W.Richard Peltier, Terence Penelhum, Norman Penner, M.James Penton, R.James Penton, Michael B.Percy, William Perehudoff, William T.Perks*, R.I.Perla, Trivedi V.N.Persaud, Clayton O.Person, Erik J.Peters*, Robert Henry Peters, Jeannie Peterson, R.L.Peterson, Thomas E.Peterson, Jaroslav Petryshyn, Louis-Philippe Phaneuf, Peter P.Phelan, Edward Phelps, Jeffrey Philips, Carol A.Phillips, David W.Phillips, Paul Phillips, Roy A.Phillips, Ruth Bliss Phillips, Truman P.Phillips, Donald J.C.Phillipson*, Fred Phipps, Ellen I.Picard, Victor Piche, George L.Pickard, Richard A.Pierce, Thomas W.Pierce, Claudine Pierre-Deschenes*, Ruth Roach Pierson, Juri Pill, Mike Pinder, K.A.Pirozynski, David G.Pitt, Janet E.Miller Pitt*, Robert D.Pitt*, Joseph Pivato, Antoine Plamondon, Rejean Plamondon, Richard L.Plant, Jozinus Ploeg, Helene Plouffe*, T.J.Plunkett, Thomas K.Poiker, Mario Polese, H.Pollard, Frank Polnaszek, J.Rick Ponting, Annelies M.Pool*, Kananginak Pootoogook, Carol Ann Pope, Hugh A.Porteous, Arthur Porter, John R.Porter, Marion Porter, Bruce D.Posgate, Michael Posluns, Victor Post, Bernard Pothier, Gilles C.M.Potvin, Gabrielle Poulin, Andreas Poulsson, Deborah J.Powell, James V.Powell, Margaret E.Prang, Christopher Pratt, Larry R.Pratt, Mary Pratt, Norman E.P.Pressman, Richard A.Prestion, Richard A.Preston, Richard J.Preston, Hugh Preston-Thomas, Bruce Price, John A.Price, Alexander D.Pringle, Gordon Pritchard, James Pritchard, John Pritchard, C.J.Pritchet, John T.A.Proctor, A.Paul Pross, Michel Proulx, Pudlo Pudlat, Garth Charles Pugh, Nancy Pukingrnak, Terrence M.Punch, James Purcell, Arnold L.Purdon, Eric D.Putt, Zenon W.Pylyshyn, Terence H.Qualter, Harvey A.Quamme, D.B.Quayle, Frank Quinn, Karl-Heinz Raach, Ian Radford, Bruce Rains, H.Keith Ralston, Victor J.Ramraj, Donald A.Ramsay, Peter G.Ramsden, R.Keith Raney, John Rapkin, Egon Rapp, John Rasmussen, Mark A.Rasmussen*, Anthony W.Rasporich, Beverly J.Rasporich, George A.Rawlyk, Arthur J.Ray, Alan Rayburn, David R.Raynor, J.Edgar Rea, John H.Read, Magdalene Redekop, Ron Redfern, Walter Redinger, Gerald Redmond*, Austin Reed, F.Leslie C.Reed, John Reeves, Randall R.Reeves, Ellen M.Regan, T.D.Regehr*, Alison M.Reid, Bill Reid, David C.Reid, George Agnew Reid, Ian A.Reid, John G.Reid*, M.H.Reid, Monty Reid, Richard Reid, Robert G.B.Reid, J.Nolan Reilly, Sharon Reilly, Henry M.Reiswig, Gil Remillard, A.Jim Rennie, Donald Andrews Rennie, Peter Reshitnyk, Viljo Revell, Joshua Reynolds, Francois Ricard, Pierre Richard, John Richards, William D.Richards, Eric Harvey Richardson, Keith W.Richardson, W.George Richardson, Alex Richman, Roger R.Rickwood, Laurie Ricou, W.Craig Riddell, Peter E.Rider*, William Rider-Rider, Robin Ridington, Walter E.Riedel, Paul W.Riegert, Roger E.Riendeau, Bert Riggs, Nelson A.Riis, Peter Rindisbacher, Jean-Paul Riopelle, J.C.Ritchie, S.Andrew Robb, [--?--] Robe, Guy Robert, Jean-Claude Robert*, Lucie Robert, Veronique Robert, Eugene Roberto, Goodridge Roberts, Ian Ross Robertson*, J.A.L.Robertson, Marion Robertson, Raleigh John Robertson, Rejean Robidoux, Denise Robillard, Bart T.Robinson, J.Lewis Robinson, Sinclair Robinson, Tom W.Robson, Yves Roby, Douglas Roche, Guy Rocher, Tibor Roder, William Rodney , Russell G.A.Rodrigo, Juan Rodriguez, Robert C.Roeder, Jacob Rogers*, Robert J.Rogerson*, H.R.Rokeby-Thomas, Charles G.Roland, Eugene W.Romaniuk, Joseph R.Romanow, Barbara Romanowski, David Rome, George Romney, Paul Romney, Keith Ronald, William Ronald, Donna Yavorsky Ronish, Constance Rooke, Edward Roper, Albert Rose, Phyllis Rose, Earl Rosen(?), Ann C.Rosenberg, Alexander Ross, Alexander M.Ross, Catherine Sheldrick Ross, David I.Ross, David P.Ross, Henry U.Ross, Gordon Rostoker, Gordon Oliver Rothney, George A.Rothrock, Samuel Rothstein, Abraham Rotstein, Leonard R.Roueche, Jacques Rouillard*, Guildo Rousseau, Henri-Paul Rousseau, Adolphe-Basile Routhier, Marie Routledge, Donald Cameron Rowat, R.Geoffrey Rowberry, Frederick W.Rowe, John Stanley Rowe, Kenneth Rowe, Percy A.Rowe, Gordon G.Rowland, Diana Rowley, Harry C.Rowsell, David J.Roy, Fernande Roy, Muriel K.Roy, Patricia E.Roy, Reginald H.Roy, Kenneth Roy Rozee, Lorne Rubenstein*, Ken Rubin, Leon J.Rubin, Gerald J.Rubio, Mary H.Rubio, David-Thierry Ruddel, Leonard Lee Rue, Norman J.Ruff, Wilson Ruiz, Norman A.Rukavina, Oliver John Clyve Runnalls, Robert John Rupert, Karl M.Ruppenthal, Roger Rushdy, Dale A.Russell, Hilary Russell, Loris S.Russell*, Peter A.Russell, Victor L.Russell, Paul Frederick William Rutherford, R.W.Rutherford, Nathaniel W.Rutter, Douglas E.Ryan, James T.Ryan, John Ryan, Joseph Ryan, Judith Hoegg Ryan, Shannon Ryan, June M.Ryder, Robert A.Ryerson, Oiva W.Saarinen, Ann P.Sabina, Dimo Safari, Moshe Safdie, Eric W.Sager(?), Marc Saint-Hilaire*, Bernard Saint-Jacques, Gaston J.Saint Laurent, B.Saladin-D'Anglure, Arnaud Sales, Richard F.Salisbury, Jeffrey Sallot, Liora Salter, Douglas D.Sameoto, J.Samuel, G.M.Sanders, Marie E.Sanderson, Margaret J.Sandison, Leonard Sandler, Joan Sangster, [A.B?] Sanson, Joy L.Santink, Allen Sapp, Sonia Sarfati, A.Margaret Sarjeant, William A.S.Sarjeant, Roger Sarty*, David J.Sauchyn, John S.Saul, Pierre Sauriol, Harry Savage, Pierre Savard, D.B.O.Savile, Joel S.Savishinsky, Ronald Savitt, Rodney J.Sawatsky, Ronald G.Sawatsky, Lorne William Sawula, Deborah C.Sawyer*, Robert J.Sawyer, John T.Saywell, Christopher M.Scarfe, M.H.Scargill, Otto Schaefer, Barbara Ann Schau, David Scheffel, Harold I.Schiff, Sidney S.Schipper, Peter Schledermann, Benjamin Schlesinger, Wilhelm Schmidt, Nancy Schmitz*, Don Schneider, Norbert Schoenauer, Barbara Schrodt*, George A.Schultz, Joan M.Schwartz, Elizabeth J.Schweizer, Karl Schweizer, Charles Schwier, Stephen Scobie*, G.Scorras, David S.Scott, John Scott(?), Marianne Scott, MaryLynn Scott, Peter J.Scott, Robert Scott, Stephen A.Scott, W.Beverly Scott*, J.Scrimgeour, Geoffrey G.E.Scudder, Allen Seager*, D.Bruce Sealey, Gary Sealey(?), Spencer G.Sealey, Louis M.Sebert, Kent Sedgwick, Norman Seeff, Harold N.Segall, Martin Segger, Norman Seguin, Alec H.Sehon, H.John Selwoood, Neil A.Semple*, Yoshio Senda, Elinor Kyte Senior, Hereward Senior, Robert Allan Serne, John Sewell, Christopher M.Seymour, Patrick D.Seymour, Aqjangajuk Shaa, Doris Shadbolt, Douglas Shadbolt, Ed Shaffer, Fouad E.Shaker, Elizabeth E.Shannon, Bernard J.Shapiro, Frances M.Shaver, Gordon C.Shaw, L.Shaw, Murray C.Shaw*, Clifford D.Shearing, Carol Sheehan, Nancy M.Sheehan, Harry Sheffer, Edward Sheffield, Rose Sheinen, B-Z.Shek, Jaroslaw W.Shelest, Ian Shelton, Roy J.Shephard, R.Ronald Sheppard, Robert Sheppard, Robert G.Sherrin, Ellen Shifrin, Chang-Tai Shih, Ernest Shipman, Rosemary Shipton, Richard Short, Kiyomi Shoyama, Thomas K.Shoyama, Orville J.W.Shugg, Ken R.Shultz, William L.H.Shuter, Patricia A.Sibbald, Nicholas Sidor, Arthur Siegel, David P.Silcox, Lennard Sillanpaa, A.I.Silver, Elaine Leslau Silverman, C.Ross Silversides, Richard Simeon*, Steve Simon, C.J.Simpson, Tom Sinclair-Faulkner, Antoine Sirois, Rebecca Sisler, O.F.G.Sitwell, Alan Edward Skeoch, Grace Skogstad, Peter Slater, Yar Slavutych, H.Olav Slaymaker, Alfred E.Slinkard, William A.Sloan*, D.Scott Slocombe, Charles E.Slonecker, Peter Gerent Sly, Patricia Smart, Al Smith(?), Andre Smith, Andrea Barbara Smith, Barry L.Smith, Bill Smith, David B.Smith, David E.Smith, Denis Smith*, Derek G.Smith, Donald A.Smith, Donald B.Smith*, Douglas A.Smith, Frances K.Smith, James G.E.Smith, James N.M.Smith, Jim Smith, Kenneth V.Smith, Maurice V.Smith, Peter C.Smith*, Peter J.Smith, Shirlee Anne Smith, T.Bradbrooke Smith, William Young Smith(?), D.Laureen Snider, Dean R.Snow, Michael Snow, James D.Snowdon, Thomas P.Socknat, Omond M.Solandt, Margaret A.Somerville, Karl Sommerer, James Herbert Soper, John R.Sorfleet, Pierre Sormany(?), Pierre Soulard, Mary E.Southcott, Jack G.Souther, David A.E.Spalding, Roman Spalek, William Bray Spaulding, Stephen A.Speisman, Andrew N.Spencer, Deirdre Spencer, Don Spencer, Frank Spencer(?), John F.T.Spencer, John H.Spencer, Glay Sperling, Douglas O.Spettigue, Godfrey L.Spragge, D.N.Sprague*, William A.Spray, Eric A.Sprenger, Robetrt A.Sproule, Irene M.Spry, C.P.Stacey, Robert Stacey, W.R.Stadelman, David A.T.Stafford, John K.Stager, Ronald J.Stagg, Elvira Stahl, Denis Stairs, Douglas G.Stairs, Robert M.Stamp*, W.T.Stanbury, Daniel Stang, David M.Stanley, Della M.M.Stanley*, George F.G.Stanley, Laurie C.C.Stanley, Charles R.Stanton, Gail Starr, Michael Staveley, Margaret M.Stayner, Gordon W.Stead, James Steele, Taylor A.Steeves, Baldur R.Stefansson, Janet R.Stein, Michael B.Stein, Gilbert A.Stelter, Philip C.Stenning, Philip H.R.Stepney, Howard A.Steppler, Theodor D.Sterling, H.H.Stern, Gail Stevens, Peter Stevens, Charlotte Stevenson, Garth Stevenson*, John T.Stevenson, J.Douglas Stewart, John B.Stewart*, John R.Stewart*, Kenneth W.Stewart, Lillian D.Stewart*, Michael E.Stiles, John R.Stocking, Jennifer Stoddart, Boris Peter Stoicheff, Henry R.Syoker, Kay F.Stone, Donald H.Stonehouse, Anna K.Storgaard, Gerald J.Stortz, George Morley Story, Dennis L.Stossel, Jon C.Stott, Grant Strate, Otto P.Strausz, Elwood W.Stringham, Veronica Strong-Boag, Richard A.Stroppel, J.R.Tim Struthers, James Struthers, Edrward Struzik, Graeme Stuart, Richard Stuart, Ross Stuart, Konrad W.Studnicki-Gizbert, Franc Sturino, Peter Stursberg, Richard Stursberg, Brian E.Sullivan, Kevin Sullivan, William F.Summers, M.Ann Sunahara, Shan-Ching Sung, David A.Sutherland, Maxwell Sutherland, Neil Sutherland, P.Sutherland, Sharon L.Sutherland, Stuart R.J.Sutherland*, Maia-Mari Sutnik, David Takayoshi Suzuki, Donald Swainson, Neil A.Swainson, Robert H.Swanson, Robert S.Sward, Alastair Sweeny, Catherine Swift, George Swinton, Katherine E.Swinton, William Elgin Swinton, Jan D.Switzer, K.D.Switzer-Howse, Frances A.Swyripa, Philippe Sylvain*, Guy Sylvestre, Rodney Symington, E.Leigh Syms, Emoke J.E.Szathmary, Gerald Tailfeathers, James J.Talman, Adrian Tanner, Robert S.Tarnopolski, Walter Surma Tarnopolsky, Leslie K.Tarr, Sylvie Taschereau, Jeremy B.Tatum, Thomas E.Tausky, C.J.Taylor*, Charles Taylor, Christopher Edward Taylor, F.Taylor, J.Garth Taylor, J.Mary Taylor, James A.Toylor, Jeff Taylor, John H.Taylor(?), John Leonard Taylor, M.Brook Taylor, Philip S.Taylor, Roy Lewis Taylor, Sylvia Taylor, William Clyne Taylor, William E.Taylor, Ghassem Tehrani, Robert G.Telewiak, R.John Templin, Paul Tennant, Brian D.Tennyson, Lorne Tepperman, Jaan Terasmae, Yves Tessier, Pierre Theberge, Leon Theriault, Michel Theriault, Sharon Thesen*, J.Laurent Thibault, George J.Thiessen, Stuart A.Thiesson, Marise Thivierge, Nicole Thivierge, Ann W.Thomas, Clara Thomas, Eileen Mitchell Thomas, Gerald Arthur Thomas, Gregory Thomas, Morley K.Thomas, Paul G.Thomas, Andrew Royden Thompson, Dixon A.R.Thompson, Ian S.Thompson, John Herd Thompson, John R.Thompson, Margaret W.Thompson, Teresa Thompson, William Paul Thompson, Alex J.Thomson, Colin A.Thomson, Duane Thomson, Malcolm M.Thomson, Reginald George Thomson*, Stanley Thomson, Tom Thomson, Hugh G.Thorburn, Frederick J.Thorpe, Catherine M.V.Thuro, John L.Tiedje, Herman Tiessen, Seha M.Tinic, Maria Tippett, Mary Tivy, Ewen C.D.Todd, James M.Toguri, George S.Tomkins, Vladislav A.Tomovic, Peter M.Toner, W.J.Topley, Pierre Tousignant(?), Harold B.Town*, Joan B.Townsend, Richard G.Townsend, Charlotte Townsend-Gault,Tak Toyota, Lynn E.H.Trainer, Anthony A.Travill, Claire Tremblay*, Gaetan Tremblay, Jean-Noel Tremblay, Jean-Yves Tremblay, Marc-Adelard Tremblay, Cecyle Trepanier, Pierre Trepanier, Stanley G.Triggs, Susan Mann Trofimenkoff, Harold Troper, Elizabeth A.Trott*, Barry D.Truax, Pierre E.Trudeau, Marc J.Trudel, Marcel Trudel, Mark E.H.Trueman, James A.Tuck*, Albert V.Tucker, Jaap J.Tuinman, Gerald J.J.Tulchinsky, Judith E.Tulloch, Verena J.Tunnicliffe, Archie L.W.Tuomi, Allan Tupper, Gael Turnbull, H.E.Turner, Michael A.H.Turner, Nancy J.Turner*, William J.Turnock, Katherine Tweedie, Christopher D.Tyler, Edward W.Tyrchniewicz, M.C.Urquhart, Auguste Vachon, G.Oliver Vagt, A.J.R.Vaillancourt, Gail C.Valaskakis, Frank G.Vallee, Marc Vallieres, Andre Vanasse, S.Van Den Bergh, Rosamond M.Vanderburgh, Mies Van Der Rohe, Cornelius H.Vanderwolf, Robert O.Van Everdingen, Blanche Lemco Van Ginkel,Hans Van Leeuwen, Francoise Van Roey-Roux, Charles E.Van Wagner, Alice Van Wart, Christine Van Zwamen, Christopher Varley*, Frederick Horsman Varley, Joan M.Vastokas, Frederick Vaughan, Edmund W.Vaz, Bill Vazan, Richard Veatch, Michele M.Veeman, Terrence S.Veeman, P.Susan Verdier, Arjen Verkaik, Andre Vermeirre, F.A.Verner, Pierre Veronneau, Claude Vezina, Raymond Vezina, Roger Vick*, Bernard L.Vigod*, Gisele Villeneuve, Aubrey R.Vincent, Thomas B.Vincent, Louis P.Visentin(?), Kati Vita, Vadim D.Vladykov, Douglas Voice, Nive Voisine*, George M.Volkoff, Michael Vollmer, Edwinna Von Baeyer, Paul Von Baich, C.Haehling Von Lanzenauer, Roger D.Voyer, Richard Vroom*, Pamela S.Wachna, Stephen M.Waddams(?), Susan Wagg, Anton Wagner*, J.A.Wainwright, W.A.Waiser, P.B.Waite*, Thomas W.Wakeling, Michael John Walcroft, David B.Walden, Deward E.Walker, James W.St.G.Walker, John P.Walker, Karen Walker, Roger G.Walker, Susan Walker, Thomas Walkom, Birgitta Linderoth Wallace, Carl M.Wallace*, Hugh N.Wallace, Jan Wallace, P.R.Wallace, Jean-Pierre Wallot, J.A.Walper, Susan Walsh, J.Grant Wanzel, Norman Ward, Philip R.Ward, W.Peter Ward, Tracy Ware, Wesley K.Wark, John Warkentin, John Anson Warner,Peter D.A.Warwick, Jerry Wasserman, A.M.C.Waterman, Janice Waters, Elizabeth Waterston, Mel Watkins, D.Scott Watson, Homer Watson, Lorne Watson, William G.Watson, Robert D.Watt, Ron Watts Douglas Waugh, Earle H.Waugh, Morris Wayman, Christopher Weait, John C.Weaver, James L.Webb, John Webber, Anna Weber, Roland Weber, D.B.Webster, Douglas R.Webster, Gloria Cranmer Webster, Helen R.Webster, William G.Wegenast, Tom Wein, Peter H.Weinrich, Robert Stanley Weir, Thomas R.Weir, Merrily Weisbord, G.Vernon Wellburn, Harry L.Welsh, Carl J.Wenaas, Leo H.Werner, Douglas Wertheimer, D.V.Chip Weseloh, Benjamin West, J.Thomas West*, Roxroy West, D.W.S.Westlake, Marla L.Weston, Donald G.Wetherell, Robert Reginald Whale, Linda D.Whalen, Bruce A.Wheatcroft, C.F.J.Whebell, John O.Wheeler, Reginald Whitaker, Clinton Oliver White, John White, M.Lillian White, Margaret Mary Whitehead, Alan Whitehorn, Leon Whiteson, James R.Whiteway, Gordon Francis Whitmore, Donald R.Whyte, Edgar B.Wickberg, Joyce Wieland, Thomas Wien, Ernest J.Wiggins, Darlene Wight, Thomas W.Wilby, Betty Wilcox, Norman J.Wilimovsky, Karen Wilkin, Bruce William Wilkinson, J.A.Wilkinson, Robert C.Willey, Al Williams, David Ricardo Williams, Glyndwr Williams, Maureen C.Williams, Patricia Lynn Williams, Penny Williams, Richard M.Williams, Ridgeley Williams, Sydney B.Williams, W.M.Williams, Mary F.Williamson, Moncrieff Williamson, Christopher J.Willis, Norman M.Willis, Rod Willmot, Bruce G.Wilson, Donald R.Wilson, Harold E.Wilson, Ian E.Wilson, J.Donald Wilson, J.Tuzo Wilson, Jean Wilson*, Helmut K.Wimmer, Leland Windreich(?), Elizabeth Windsor, Brent Windwick, Robin W.Winks, Gregory Wirick, Ronald G.Wirick, S.F.Wise, William J.Withrow, Henry Wittenberg(?), Leonhard S.Wolfe, William C.Wonders, Peter Wons, Bernard Wood, George Woodcock*, M.Emerson Woodruff, Robert James Woods, John Elliott Woolford, Glenn T.Wright, Harold E.Wright, J.F.C.Wright, J.V.Wright, Janet Wright, Kenneth O.Wright, Roy A.Wright*, Paul Wyczynski, Jan Wyers, F.E.Wyman, Max Wyman, Graeme Wynn, Leo Yaffe, Maxwell F.Yalden, Don Yee, Derek York, A.J.Sandy Young, Bill Young(?), C.Maureen Young, David A.Young, Gayle Young, Jane Young, Jeffery D.Young, John H.Young, Roland S.Young, Walter D.Young, Manuel Zack, Jas Zagon, R.Perry Zavitz, Eberhard Heinrich Zeidler, Suzanne E.Zeller, Jarold K.Zeman, Joyce Zemans*, Norman W.Zepp, [--?--] Zerafa, Jacob S.Ziegel, Bruce H.Ziff, Frank D.Zingrone, Stephen C.Zoltai*, Louise Zuk, David Zuszman.

 

includes:

i) Dudek, Louis, by Michael Gnarowski (vol.1/pp.631-632; prose with passing reference to bpNichol)

ii) Humorous Writing in English, by Stephen Scobie (vol.2/pp.1o26-1o27; prose, with a halfparagraph on Nichol's the martyrology)

iii) Modern and Contemporary Periods, by Geoffrey Hancock (vol.2/pp.1219-122o; part 2 of Literary Magazines in English, with reference to Nichol & grOnk)

iv) Literature in English, by W.H.New (vol.2/pp.1223-1226; prose in 4 parts includes part

--4. History (in 6 parts includes part

----f. 1959-80s (with passing reference to Nichol)))

v) Martyrology, The, by Step[hen Scobie (vol.2/p.1311; on books 1-4 with quote by Frank Davey from bpNichol)

vi) Nichol, Barrie Phillip, by Douglas Barbour (vol.3/p.1498; revised from its appearance in the 1st edition)

vii) Novel in English, 1959-1980s, by Linda Hutcheon (vol.3/pp.1537-1539; passing reference to Nichol)

viii) Ondaatje, Michael, by Sharon Thesen (vol.3/p.1566; prose, passing reference to Nichol/sons of captain poetry)

ix) Oral Literature in English, by Barbara Godard (vol.3/pp.1581-1582; with passing references to Nichol/Four Horsemen)

x) Poetry in English, 1960-1980s, by Douglas Barbour (vol.3/pp.1697-1699; with references to Nichol & Four Horsemen))

xi) Scobie, Stephen, by Shirley Neuman (vol.3/p.1959; with reference to Scobie's bpNichol: What History Teaches)

xii) Short Fiction in English, by J.R.Tim Struthers (vol.3/pp.1996-1997; in 9 parts, includes part

--6. Experimental Writing (with passing reference to Nichol's Craft Dinner))

xiii) INDEX, by Eve Gardner & Ron Gardner (vol.4/pp.2336-2736; entries on Nichol, Four Horsemen & select book titles only)

___________________________

 

- 1st edition, 1985

No asterisk(s) for this last one of the batch, thankfully :P Here's the box (at least) for the new head unit, actual photos of the finished install will come later of course. This unit isn't one of those fully voice-controlled $1500 Alpine models, in fact the price is well south of there! And no, not necessarily any brand loyalty to JVC either.

 

There's actually a Kenwood model that's almost exactly the same thing (and same price). The Kenwood name is thought to be more upscale, but I kind of liked the look of the screens on the JVC version just a bit better. Unfortunately, there's zero customization options for screen background/lighting colors etc. for those particular, lower-priced full-touchscreen models, so thought I'd better pick wisely since I'll be stuck with the screen design!

 

And if I don't forget to add them, check out the photo notes here as well. Next time on the (very!) "Amateur L_dawg Flickr Car Stereo Installation Channel", we tear further into my dash and yank out the old JVC!

Large on black.

 

BFI Southbank, London.

DSC_0077.jpg

Digging up the archieves. Camera at service center :(

Invitation to join our new group “Star Trek Forever” No Limits on uploads!

www.flickr.com/groups/2601080@N25/

 

Star Trek: Asterisk "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home"

Written by Steve Beaudry

Release Date: November 26, 1986

Written by: Steve Meerson & Peter Krikes and Harve Bennett & Nicholas Meyer

Directed by: Leonard Nimoy

Review

Deep in the outer reaches of space, a monstrous space probe passes by the USS Saratoga and knocks its power out on the way to Earth. Meanwhile, on Earth, a Klingon ambassador accuses Kirk of murdering a ship full of Klingons in his quest to exterminate the Klingon race with the Genesis probe (that thing will just not go away). The Federation president says that Kirk will face nine violations of Starfleet regulations, the crew of the Enterprise has been stuck on Vulcan for three months, and on top of all that, a computer is trying to find out how Spock feels. There's nowhere to go from here but up.

 

Well, in The Search for Spock, Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise stole a starship, blew it up, visited a forbidden planet, and apparently six other naughty things, so now they're getting ready to go back to Earth on their stolen Klingon Bird-of-Prey and face the music. There's just one hitch in this plan: the probe. It has now reached earth, shut down main power to... everything... and caused a huge weather phenomenon that blocked out the sun. So, basically, humanity has however long it'll take for Earth to freeze from lack of sunlight to tell this thing to move out of the way.

"When this is over, I'm quitting Starfleet and starting a gumbo restaurant."

In their Klingon ship, Kirk and the crew approach Earth and pick up a distress call from the president with the manly gray beard saying that Earth is under attack, so they pick up the probe's transmissions and analyze it. Since the transmission appears to be directed at the oceans, Kirk has Uhura compensate for the density of the water. When the audio effects are all in, the probe's transmission ends up sounding a lot like whale song; specifically, the extinct humpback whale. There's only one way they can get a humpback whale to answer the probe: The Guardian of Forev-... er... wait, no, the highly dangerous and tricky slingshot time warp maneuver. So there are two ways. We'll go with the dangerous one for now.

 

When they arrive in 1986, they confirm the date by testing the pollution in the air. Then they go into cloak and land in the middle of a park in San Francisco. After scaring off a couple of trash guys, the crew sets out to downtown. Their mission: 1) find humpback whales 2) get them on board the Klingon ship 3) fix the ship's dilithium crystals so they can go home. They split up to achieve their separate goals. Spock and Kirk go for the whales, Bones and Scotty go to build a proper tank, Uhura and Chekov find some nuclear power to fix the crystals.

Spock would like to take this opportunity to learn karate.

Spock and Kirk easily find some whales after they see an advertisement for the local whale institute where they meet George, Gracie and Dr. Gillian Taylor. George and Gracie are the whales and Gillian is the nice lady who knows everything about them. So Spock and Kirk get to know about the whales in their own unique way: Spock mind melds with Gracie and Kirk seduces Gillian. Meanwhile, Bones and Scotty are having a time of their own getting some plexiglass to make a whale tank. Luckily, they have an ace up their sleeves. They meet with a guy who deals in plexiglass and trade the secret formula for transparent aluminum in exchange for their required plexiglass. Also, Sulu learns how to drive a helicopter so they can lift all that plexiglass to the ship.

 

Things are just about set to go; Kirk is ready to pick up the whales, the plexiglass is ready to be delivered, everything is running smoothly until Chekov screws things up. He finds the USS Enterprise, the aircraft carrier, and, with Uhura's help, steals some of its nuclear power. Well, the officers on board sense the power drain and go looking for him. He hands the power device over to Uhura who beams up to the Klingon ship. But there's not enough transporter power to get Chekov, too, and he's captured. After escaping by attempting and failing to stun his captors, he runs and jumps off a high platform and hospitalizes himself.

It's possible they just got too high.

Chekov arrives at Mercy Hospital, so now they have to go save him before taking off. But to make matters worse, Gillian decided she wants to help, so she wandered off into the park and ran into the cloaked ship. So they beam her aboard, explain a few things, and then run off to save Chekov. With Gillian's help, they sneak into the hospital and pretend to be doctors. Chekov, a suspected Russian spy, is being kept under guard, but Bones easily tricks them into believing they have an emergency. He has a bit of a fight with the attending surgeon and then Kirk locks the surgeon and his team in a small room. Bones heals Chekov, and they leave. The guards give chase once they see that Chekov is being kidnapped, but they beam up in the elevator and make a clean getaway.

 

Ok, so, Chekov is safe, the tank is built, the dilithium crystals are fixed, all they need now are the whales. Kirk gets their tracking frequency from Gillian and says his goodbyes. She can't, after all, go to the future with them. Right? Weellll... as soon as he starts transporting aboard the ship, Gillian hops on him and comes with. She's staying whether Kirk likes it or not. With Gillian aboard, they set out to find George and Gracie. They find them right in front of a whaling ship. Still cloaked, they head right over to them and just hover for a bit while the whaling ship takes aim. And then... the decloakening.

Klingons on the port bow, captain!

Successfully having scared off the whalers, Scotty beams up George and Gracie and they make their way to the future. In a great evolution of Spock's revived character, he makes his "best guess" with the calculations for time warp, and they head out. Back in the future, they crash into San Francisco Bay. While the rest of the crew abandons ship, Kirk releases the whales out of the cargo bay and into the ocean. Once they're out, Kirk joins his crew as the whales start talking to the probe. After a delightful reunion and conversation with its good buddies, George and Gracie, the Probe turns around, says "thank you!" and leaves the Sol system in peace. The day is saved! So, now it's time for Kirk to stand trial.

 

Oh, right, yeah, this was the whole reason they were coming back to Earth, wasn't it? The crew of the Enterprise all stand in front of the president to be judged. Because for some reason the president is the judge in the future. Ready to be taken out of Starfleet forever, they all, including Spock who "stands with his shipmates", they all hear the charges brought to them. And then the president says he's getting rid of all of them in light of them saving the entire Earth, and all. The only charge that sticks, disobeying a superior officer, is directed solely at Kirk and because of it, he is reduced in rank to Captain. Which is basically like grounding a nerd to his room with the Internet still on. And not only that, it wouldn't be Star Trek and Kirk wouldn't be Captain without the proper ship. They head out to the shipyard and find the brand spankin' new USS Enterprise NCC-1701-A. The only proper ship for them to go and "see what's out there."

 

Overall Thoughts

This had been my absolute favorite Star Trek movie for the longest time until my tastes matured and I learned to like The Wrath of Kahn just slightly better. I love a good comedy sci-fi, especially when that comedy sci-fi involves time travel! Every good Star Trek series needs a comedy relief. "The Trouble with Tribbles" was that for The Original Series and this movie is that for the movie series. And, in fact, this movie was so monstrously successful, that it was almost entirely responsible for green-lighting The Next Generation. Picard would take command almost a year after this movie was released and Trek would never be the same.

 

Invitation to join our new group “Star Trek Forever” No Limits on uploads!

www.flickr.com/groups/2601080@N25/

 

Star Trek: Asterisk "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home"

Written by Steve Beaudry

Release Date: November 26, 1986

Written by: Steve Meerson & Peter Krikes and Harve Bennett & Nicholas Meyer

Directed by: Leonard Nimoy

Review

Deep in the outer reaches of space, a monstrous space probe passes by the USS Saratoga and knocks its power out on the way to Earth. Meanwhile, on Earth, a Klingon ambassador accuses Kirk of murdering a ship full of Klingons in his quest to exterminate the Klingon race with the Genesis probe (that thing will just not go away). The Federation president says that Kirk will face nine violations of Starfleet regulations, the crew of the Enterprise has been stuck on Vulcan for three months, and on top of all that, a computer is trying to find out how Spock feels. There's nowhere to go from here but up.

 

Well, in The Search for Spock, Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise stole a starship, blew it up, visited a forbidden planet, and apparently six other naughty things, so now they're getting ready to go back to Earth on their stolen Klingon Bird-of-Prey and face the music. There's just one hitch in this plan: the probe. It has now reached earth, shut down main power to... everything... and caused a huge weather phenomenon that blocked out the sun. So, basically, humanity has however long it'll take for Earth to freeze from lack of sunlight to tell this thing to move out of the way.

"When this is over, I'm quitting Starfleet and starting a gumbo restaurant."

In their Klingon ship, Kirk and the crew approach Earth and pick up a distress call from the president with the manly gray beard saying that Earth is under attack, so they pick up the probe's transmissions and analyze it. Since the transmission appears to be directed at the oceans, Kirk has Uhura compensate for the density of the water. When the audio effects are all in, the probe's transmission ends up sounding a lot like whale song; specifically, the extinct humpback whale. There's only one way they can get a humpback whale to answer the probe: The Guardian of Forev-... er... wait, no, the highly dangerous and tricky slingshot time warp maneuver. So there are two ways. We'll go with the dangerous one for now.

 

When they arrive in 1986, they confirm the date by testing the pollution in the air. Then they go into cloak and land in the middle of a park in San Francisco. After scaring off a couple of trash guys, the crew sets out to downtown. Their mission: 1) find humpback whales 2) get them on board the Klingon ship 3) fix the ship's dilithium crystals so they can go home. They split up to achieve their separate goals. Spock and Kirk go for the whales, Bones and Scotty go to build a proper tank, Uhura and Chekov find some nuclear power to fix the crystals.

Spock would like to take this opportunity to learn karate.

Spock and Kirk easily find some whales after they see an advertisement for the local whale institute where they meet George, Gracie and Dr. Gillian Taylor. George and Gracie are the whales and Gillian is the nice lady who knows everything about them. So Spock and Kirk get to know about the whales in their own unique way: Spock mind melds with Gracie and Kirk seduces Gillian. Meanwhile, Bones and Scotty are having a time of their own getting some plexiglass to make a whale tank. Luckily, they have an ace up their sleeves. They meet with a guy who deals in plexiglass and trade the secret formula for transparent aluminum in exchange for their required plexiglass. Also, Sulu learns how to drive a helicopter so they can lift all that plexiglass to the ship.

 

Things are just about set to go; Kirk is ready to pick up the whales, the plexiglass is ready to be delivered, everything is running smoothly until Chekov screws things up. He finds the USS Enterprise, the aircraft carrier, and, with Uhura's help, steals some of its nuclear power. Well, the officers on board sense the power drain and go looking for him. He hands the power device over to Uhura who beams up to the Klingon ship. But there's not enough transporter power to get Chekov, too, and he's captured. After escaping by attempting and failing to stun his captors, he runs and jumps off a high platform and hospitalizes himself.

It's possible they just got too high.

Chekov arrives at Mercy Hospital, so now they have to go save him before taking off. But to make matters worse, Gillian decided she wants to help, so she wandered off into the park and ran into the cloaked ship. So they beam her aboard, explain a few things, and then run off to save Chekov. With Gillian's help, they sneak into the hospital and pretend to be doctors. Chekov, a suspected Russian spy, is being kept under guard, but Bones easily tricks them into believing they have an emergency. He has a bit of a fight with the attending surgeon and then Kirk locks the surgeon and his team in a small room. Bones heals Chekov, and they leave. The guards give chase once they see that Chekov is being kidnapped, but they beam up in the elevator and make a clean getaway.

 

Ok, so, Chekov is safe, the tank is built, the dilithium crystals are fixed, all they need now are the whales. Kirk gets their tracking frequency from Gillian and says his goodbyes. She can't, after all, go to the future with them. Right? Weellll... as soon as he starts transporting aboard the ship, Gillian hops on him and comes with. She's staying whether Kirk likes it or not. With Gillian aboard, they set out to find George and Gracie. They find them right in front of a whaling ship. Still cloaked, they head right over to them and just hover for a bit while the whaling ship takes aim. And then... the decloakening.

Klingons on the port bow, captain!

Successfully having scared off the whalers, Scotty beams up George and Gracie and they make their way to the future. In a great evolution of Spock's revived character, he makes his "best guess" with the calculations for time warp, and they head out. Back in the future, they crash into San Francisco Bay. While the rest of the crew abandons ship, Kirk releases the whales out of the cargo bay and into the ocean. Once they're out, Kirk joins his crew as the whales start talking to the probe. After a delightful reunion and conversation with its good buddies, George and Gracie, the Probe turns around, says "thank you!" and leaves the Sol system in peace. The day is saved! So, now it's time for Kirk to stand trial.

 

Oh, right, yeah, this was the whole reason they were coming back to Earth, wasn't it? The crew of the Enterprise all stand in front of the president to be judged. Because for some reason the president is the judge in the future. Ready to be taken out of Starfleet forever, they all, including Spock who "stands with his shipmates", they all hear the charges brought to them. And then the president says he's getting rid of all of them in light of them saving the entire Earth, and all. The only charge that sticks, disobeying a superior officer, is directed solely at Kirk and because of it, he is reduced in rank to Captain. Which is basically like grounding a nerd to his room with the Internet still on. And not only that, it wouldn't be Star Trek and Kirk wouldn't be Captain without the proper ship. They head out to the shipyard and find the brand spankin' new USS Enterprise NCC-1701-A. The only proper ship for them to go and "see what's out there."

 

Overall Thoughts

This had been my absolute favorite Star Trek movie for the longest time until my tastes matured and I learned to like The Wrath of Kahn just slightly better. I love a good comedy sci-fi, especially when that comedy sci-fi involves time travel! Every good Star Trek series needs a comedy relief. "The Trouble with Tribbles" was that for The Original Series and this movie is that for the movie series. And, in fact, this movie was so monstrously successful, that it was almost entirely responsible for green-lighting The Next Generation. Picard would take command almost a year after this movie was released and Trek would never be the same.

 

Story part is between the rows of asterisks.

  

Montana the Cat, and more recently His Royal Highness, Montana de Montecore (because he does tricks). I adopted him from a humane society when he was 2 and half years old. I have had him 5 years, my first cat in a long time, and my first ever, mostly all indoor cat. He does get out once in awhile. He is pretty smart, and friendly and soft. (Note: I changed 2 years to 5 years now that I have had him, because some time has passed since I wrote this.

 

************************************************************************

On April 8, 2006 I posted in a thread in the Cats and Windows group about how my cat came into my life. I spent enough time on it, that I thought I should save it here too.

I hadn't lived anywhere where I was allowed to have a cat or dog for years. I got assaulted, not by a man, like you might think, but by a crazy methamphetamine addicted woman. She was also very drunk. She pulled and pushed me to the ground, got on top of me, and viciously bit my face, among other things, and it was horrible. I needed to move away and get a safer place to live. The new place I found did not allow dogs, which is what I thought I wanted, but they would allow cats for $100 deposit each. That was a lot of money to come up with for me, plus the adoption fee at the humane society. I really felt I needed to give and receive love from a pet. I went there (the same one I still go to and photograph lots of cats) and their normal fee of $80 had been cut in half if I would choose an all black or a black and white cat. I tried to choose from those colors, and a pretty all black one bit me a little bit. I didn't like that. I went to the next cage, and he was black and white. I reached in with a couple of fingers and tried to pet him, and he won my heart. He scootched over to the cage bars so that every possible inch of him that could fit there would be available for petting. I took him out and he was calm in my lap. He was not quite 12 pounds, a big boy. We liked each other; so I got him. The $40 I had to pay covered that he had been neutered (after two and half years of being a tomcat), and shots and first vet exam, and coupons at the local pet store. I took him for his first vet exam, and he was friendly and calm and purring so loud the vet could hardly hear his heart. She said he was a wonderful big old boy and she loved him. She was the one who had neutered him. I digress. His name when I got him was Beeker. I really didn't care for that much. I thought that had been his name for 2 1/2 years, but it turned out his name was Button, and they had another cat named Button at the time and couldn't have duplicates. I thought about calling him Sailor because he was on "Sale", but that didn't stick. I decided that Montana means mountain, and he was indeed a mountain of fluff (not really long hair, just medium and soft). Montana seemed like just the right name for him. Later after he taught himself one trick, and then I taught him another, I decided he should have a fancier name (just for fun). I call him His Royal Highness, Montana de Montecore. He can jump through a ring of fire (well, it is a hoop with red cellophane flames) from one chair to another to get a teaspoon of root beer float, or blueberry cheesecake soda. I don't like to give him too much. All I have to do now is go to the refrigerator and he goes and sits on a chair waiting to do his trick. He also likes cream of mushroom soup. Go figure. He is a 90% indoor cat, but he does get out sometimes. I bet the lady who gave him up never figured that he would be instantly recognized on Flickr and Fotolog, by many, many people all over the world. And to think I got him on a half-price sale. He is a faithful companion. There are probably a lot of little Montana Jrs. in his old neighborhood from before he was neutered.

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He hit #24 today (Feb. 12, 2007 on Flickr Explore, and I was thinking that was the best he ever got, but my records show at one time he was number 9) I'm excited anyway.

(007montanatusquared4flickr)

 

"Condensing Tags So Not 75"

 

One block starts the quilt journey.

arrived : December 21, 2016

 

arrived : December 21, 2016

the workroom received all 22 colour of the Asterisks collection. Full Metre, Half Metre and Fat Quarter bundles are available while they last.

Our Network Operations Center

The laptop is running Asterisk on Debian for our VOIP needs.

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Tula Pink saltwater asterisk for Mel. I think I'll make a few more of these for my weekender friends, they're so darn cute! Mel, I hope that white background is ok, I couldn't find a grey that I was happy with! Pattern link... sewtakeahike.typepad.com/sewtakeahike/2013/03/asterisk.html.

This card is inspired by Libby Hickson's 'Sending Sunshine' card that

was featured on the Hero Arts blog.

 

The white card was embossed with a swirl pattern with a Cuttlebug

and stitched on to pink card stock. I've stamped blue and pink flowers

on the cream topper using one of the flower stamps from the Hero Arts

Quatros set LL064 Asterisks. The word 'spring' was stamped with

alphabet stamps. The pink ribbon is threaded through a blue 'Ribbon

Brad' by Woodware.

 

Blogged.

"Splotch/Asterisk" is the result of a nearly five-month long creative collaboration between artists JJ Cromer and Stephen Loya, beginning in late August 2012 and ending in early January 2013. The final results are a dozen original works of which will be on exhibit at the Off-Rhode Studio Gallery in Washington, DC (reception: Saturday, February 9, 1-4PM, 2013).

 

www.jjcromer.com/

www.steveloya.com

MMC's TFcon Chicago 2014 exclusive: Azalea* Asterisk Mode

Shark attack at Davidson's surf break in Kekaha, Kauai.

It happened after sunset on Oct. 9th, 2017.

 

According to the so-called "experts", there have "only" been TEN FATAL shark attacks in Hawaii since 1980. Here's a list of those fatal attacks. (note asterisk * indicates fatal attack confirmed by so-called experts).

 

5/24/81 - Roger Garletts - Haena, Kauai - Scuba diving

4/20/86 - Levi Chandler - Kalihiwai Point, Kauai - shore fishing

4/15/87 - Daniel Kennedy - Kailua-Kona - swimming

4/15/88 - Avery Goo - Powerboat overturned, Waihe'e, Maui

1/8/89 - Ken Ahlstrand - Wailua, Kauai - swimming with 3 others when he disappeared. Lower part of body found 6 days later, x-rays revealed teeth marks in femur & tibia

10/14/89 - Ray Mehl - Kahe point, Oahu - scuba diving

2/17/90 - Roy Tanaka - Mokapu, Kaneohe Marine Base - scuba spearfishing

11/19/91 - Suk Kyu (Steve) Park - Maliko Point, Maui - washed into ocean while shore fishing

11/26/91 - Martha Morrell - Olowalu, Maui - swimming *

2/19/92 - Bryan Adona - Leftovers, near Waimea Bay, Oahu - body boarding

11/4/92 - Aaron Romento - Keaau Beach Park, Oahu - body boarding

12/1/93 - Daniel McMoyler - Waipio, Hawaii - surfing

1/31/94 - Jim Broach - Velzyland - surfing - body parts seen but not recovered.

4/28/96 - Wayne Leong - Lobster diving lost near Laie Point, Oahu. Wetsuit remnants showed evidence of attack by large tiger shark.

7/14/96 - Trimurti Day - disappeared while jumping off rocks after midnight at Nakalele Point, Maui. Shark bitten remains found later.

3/18/1999 - Nahid Davoodabai - offshore south-east Maui - kayaking

4/4/04 - Courtney Marcher - Velzyland - surfing

4/7/04 - William McInnis - Kahana, Maui - surfing *

2/23/06 - Anthony Moore - Makena, Maui - free diving

8/30/08 - Kameron Brown - McKenzie Beach Park , Pahoa - cliff jumping / swimming (Great White Shark)

4/11/09 - Paolo Dominici - Kona - spearfishing

8/14/13 - Jana Lutteropp - Makena, Maui - snorkeling *

12/2/13 - Patrick Briney - offshore Makena, Maui - kayak fishing *

4/29/15 - Margaret Cruse - Kanahena cove / Ahihi, Makena, Maui - snorkeling *

9/17/15 - Loren "Jamie" Salis - Upolu Point - night spearfishing

10/14/16 - Joshua Goodwin - Hana, Maui - missing while spearfishing

5/25/2019 - Dr. Thomas Smiley - Kaanapali Shores, Maui, tourist swimming*

6/23/2019 - Vladimir Sukhoparov 58, of Cincinnati Ohio goes missing while swimming offshore Wailua beach, Kauai. East swell was minimal and waters were calm but very murky due to several days of rain. A helicopter searched exhaustively for 3-days before search was called off. The guy looked fit for his age. No mention of shark in news, but c'mon, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realize what likely occurred.

7/23/19 - Fathi Twalib 34, Queens Pond area of Polihale beach Kauai. Entered ocean at 7:30 P.M. and disappeared after ducking under a small wave near shore. Next morning a very large tiger shark was filmed by drone swimming just 30 yards offshore beach in line with missing man's truck.

10/4/2019 - Alan Delatorre 45, Kailua-Kona, failed to return from a night spear fishing venture. Hawaiʻi Fire Department divers recovered clothes and diving equipment in the waters near the buoy that were identified as belonging to Delatorre. They indicated the damage to the clothing to be attributed to sharks.

7/31/2020 - William "Scott" Stanga, 52, of Hana, Maui disappeared while spearfishing alone at Ku'au Bay beach below Mama's Fish House in Paia during the late afternoon.

12/8/2020 - surfer Robin Warren 56, Honolua Bay, Maui. 17-inch wide bite taken out of surfboard also made severe wound to his left side buttock and upper thigh. Victim was listed as stable after surgery but died the next day.*

6/20/2021 - Nelson Kupenes, 47, disappeared while spearfishing alone during the late afternoon / evening at Glass beach near 'Ele'ele, Kauai. KFD rescue divers recovered his dive float, weight belt, and two spear guns just 25-30 yards offshore. I heard that some body parts were also recovered but that was not in the news reports.

9/14/2021 - 67 year old woman from California disappeared while snorkeling on a dive tour at Molokini Islet offshore of south Maui. The conditions were choppy but she vanished without anyone seeing what happened. All the tour boats present searched for her as did the Coast Guard.

12/14/2021 - Tourist man from Wisconsin age 62, last seen swimming off south point at Chang's Beach fronting Makena Surf Resort. Rescue divers had to quickly exit search area when a large tiger shark appeared. The swimmer's dive mask, snorkel, and one swim fin were subsequently found.

3/7/2022 - Huy Nguyen, 44, disappeared at dusk (7 PM) at Rock Quarry Beach in Kilauea, Kauai. The U.S. Coast Guard said Nguyen had been surfing before handing off his board to his son, saying he was going to swim to shore. A dead humpback whale had washed into the shallow reef area just off the beach prior (Dec. 2021) at the surf spot Pila'a which is just a half mile from Rock Quarry. An oil slick has been visible from atop Pila'a cliff ever since.

12/8/2022 - Kristine Allen from Bellingham, Washington State, 60, was snorkeling 50-75 yards offshore Keawakapu beach in Kihei with her husband Blake when they encountered a large tiger shark. Reportedly he fought off the shark as it made several passes. He managed to swim ashore but his wife vanished during the incident and was never seen again. Her mask & snorkel were recovered where she was last seen. One report mentioned that a piece of her blue bathing suit washed ashore. A 10-12 foot tiger shark was observed in the same area the following morning. *

12/30/2023 - Jason Carter age 39 of Haiku, Maui died of injuries sustained in a shark attack while surfing at Pa'ia Bay on the north-east side of the island. *

06/23/2024 - Tamayo Perry, renown Pipeline surfer and C&C Honolulu Lifeguard is killed likely by a tiger shark while surfing at Goat Island, Malaekahana on Oahu's east side. He sustained multiple bites and lost an arm and a leg. *

9/23/2025 - Bryson Higashi, 44, last seen solo spearfishing at Waikoko's in Hanalei Bay. Shredded camouflage blue diver wetsuit material discovered washed ashore a couple days after.

1/28/2026 - Matthew Kaimana Packard-Asai, 19, of Kapaa - swept into the ocean while shore fishing along rocky coastline at Kahili beach / Rock Quarry in Kilauea. Female companion was also swept into the ocean and suffered a laceration to her leg. She was rescued shortly thereafter but Matthew Kaimana Packard-Asai disappeared from view. On Saturday January 31, 2026 his shark devoured remains were found in the vicinity.

 

These 41 fatalities may not have had the multiple eye-witnesses that the eight "expert-confirmed" attacks did, but it doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand what a shark chewed and regurgitated wetsuit or surf shorts implies. Nor does drowning in a tiger shark's jaws as it takes a victim underwater invalidate the fact that death and subsequent consumption was due to a shark attack (ie. Anthony Moore at Makena, Maui 2006). Likewise, does anyone really think Bryan Adona (whose body was never found) died from some other cause when a large tiger shark was seen within a few yards of where he was when he went missing and a huge shark bite taken out of his body-board was subsequently discovered?

 

* indicates fatal attack confirmed by so-called experts

wizardofbaum.blogspot.com/2011/05/history-of-reported-fat...

 

 

Copyright © 2019 F.E. All rights reserved.

 

IMG_20191110_170922-ANIMATION.jpg

The Asterisk War: The Academy City on the Water Festa sparkle Stella – Android & iOS apps – Freehttps://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bandainamcoent.asteriskwar&hl=enhttps://itunes.apple.com/jp/app/xue-zhan-dou-shiasutarisukufesuta/id1119950352&l=en

The...

 

jp-apps-dl.net/2016/07/22/the-asterisk-war-the-academy-ci...

STORY PART BETWEEN ROWS OF ASTERISKS

********************************************************************

 

This is the only quilt that I ever received in exactly these circumstances. I was in Tulsa, Oklahoma and my Grandmother was in bed for naps, often, and talking about wanting to have the Lord take her, nearly every night. She was about 86 at that time, and some of her relatives, my cousins, were talking about racing each other with a U-Haul to see who would be first, when she died, to get her belongings they wanted. (Incidentally she went to a foreign country, and lived several more years). In my grandmother's bedroom were two twin or smaller beds with lovely pink themed patchwork quilts. I love pink and I thought they were beautiful. But I didn't have any plans to inherit them, although I would have liked to. My grandmother had a lot of grandchildren, and I didn't expect to get anything at all, to be honest. Later on, one of my cousins called me at my place, and said that I had taken those pink quilts and that they were already promised to her and my other cousin. She insisted I give them back and they would trade me for one that wasn't as nice, but I could have it. I replied that I would take the one they didn't want, but I never got the two pink ones. I wasn't lying. I never did find out who actually did have them, but I got the "ugly duckling" quilt. I liked patchwork quilts, and didn't have very many at the time; so I was glad to get it.

 

I didn't think it was very pretty, nor very well made. And it wasn't well planned or organized with the materials the maker had. Some of the squares were just not well matched, or else they were kind of unattractive. Overall, though, I actually used it on my bed sometimes, especially when I lived in a rustic home where the people before me had left homemade furniture. It looked nice with that. So I accepted 99% of it, but there was one square I just didn't like. It didn't seem to belong at all. It wasn't really ugly like some of the browns and faded greens, and colors that clashed. In fact it was kind of a pleasant yellow, but it was the only plain yellow square on the whole quilt, and it didn't match anything. It just stood out, I truly did not like it at all. I even thought of trying to sew something else on top of it. I'd accept everything else on the quilt, except that one plain yellow square.

 

One evening I came home late, and in my absence my children had gotten frightened. Our Irish Setter, 110 pound wonderful dog, was normally not allowed in the house. There was a big porch and huge yard, and even a gorgeous river for him, but not in the house. I came in the house, and instead of in their own beds, my kids were in MY bed, with Reilly sitting straight up between them, guarding them. It was a charming and beautiful sight, and I really couldn't be angry with any of it. They were all three on the quilt. So I liked the quilt better than I had before. The lone yellow square that didn't seem to belong, still bugged me though. That was about 34 years ago.

 

As the years went by, I either bought or was given more quilts, and this one didn't get used as often, but I still have it. In the last few years, I have experienced a sea change on some things. I now enjoy the unique yellow square. When I used the quilt, particularly when I was either sick or recovering from my two different surgeries for total knee replacements, I actually pulled the quilt up to my neck, and then looked all around and had fun spotting the yellow square. I didn't really rest until I found it, not that is was that difficult to find, as it really did stand out.

 

It amazes me how I could change in this way. I wonder what other changes I will be more willing to not only accept, but to embrace, in the future because of this very small one.

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I'm putting this same basic story with the quilt picture right before it, but that quilt doesn't have as much to the story as this one.

 

I'm putting this in both my "The Tulsa, Oklahoma Years" album and my "The Springfield, Lane County, Oregon Years Beginning October 2015" album because I got the quilt in Tulsa, Oklahoma in about 1979, but I took the pictures and wrote the story just recently in Springfield, Oregon. My albums are set up so whether things actually happened in the home I lived in at the time, or whether I took a trip somewhere else, but lived in that place when I took the trip. Departure from and arrival back to a certain home gets the location of that home, whether I visited another State for awhile, or went to a waterfall 100 miles away. I do that because it is easier for me to recall where I lived at the time I took certain pictures than it is to catalog every separate occasion or incident that I photographed. There now, that should be clear as a Texas River.

  

(DSCN9578Quilt1oddsquareSOOCbordinitflickr041216)

  

(1561closeupflowerycanecurve&handleresaminitblkborder)

A longer true story than my usual ones is below the row of asterisks.

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FALL OCCURRED IN THE SPRING

 

That’s right; fall occurred in the spring of 2012. Not the kind of fall like a beautiful autumn, but the kind of fall like Humpty Dumpty. The “splat” type of fall, which must have been painful for him. Mine was surely painful for me.

 

Let me digress a bit. I already have severe arthritis in both of my knees. I was very close to having the Orthopedic Physician’s Assistant refer me to the Orthopedist for knee replacements. The assistant had already seen me for seven to nine visits or so, and a series of Orthovisc® shots, which did not help me. I understand they are a great help to some people, but I wasn‘t one of them. He told me something I was completely unaware of. He said my teeth were bad, which is true. I have upper dentures and only one real tooth in my mouth. The bottom teeth except the one I just mentioned are all rotted away. They didn’t rot completely away; there are still parts of them in and below the gum line. He said they would all have to be surgically extracted before I could have knee replacements done. I asked him, “What do my teeth have to do with my knees?” He said infection can easily set in the rotten teeth and go to the knee or cause problems with my heart, major problems like death. Thus the reader can understand how I arrived at the title for my photo set about my hospital stay…The Knee Bone’s Connected to the Jaw Bone, Huh?

 

I have been walking around with very painful knees for quite awhile now, and I cannot afford the $1,600 to $2,000 to have my teeth surgically extracted. I already paid a dentist $180 for an appointment and a Panaray® X-Ray, over a year ago, just thinking it would be nice to finally get some lower dentures too. I never did get them. He split town, taking or disposing of his equipment and his files and x-rays. That $180 is long gone for me. I cannot recover the old x-ray. Even if I did recover it, some new dentist would probably say it was out of date.

 

Medicare, which I am on, will pay for the two knee replacements, but here is the rub. They will not pay for dental. I have been in a surgical limbo with all the free pain I can stand.

 

That is the background information probably needed for this little story to be understood. There will be some OMG moments and some laughter. If it were a TV show, they would probably advertise, “You’ll Laugh; You’ll Cry; You’ll Sell Your Chickens; You’ll Call Your Congressman, and You’ll No Doubt Charge Your Cell Phone!”

 

That brings us to Thursday the 15th of March, 2012. (Beware the Ides of March). My daughter called to see if I could and would watch Rose all day Friday the 16th , as she had forgotten that she had signed up to be chaperone for her daughter, Anna Leigh’s, school field trip. It was going to be quite a bit out of town, the other direction from where I live. It was to be a special day. I wanted to be their hero; so I said sure. Some of you have seen Rose, the Hungarian Vizsla puppy among my photos. Rose is beautiful and young, and strong, and undisciplined and should probably be named Wild Rose. I love her, but she is a major handful. I had already watched her for 8 days while they went on a trip out of state, got one day off and then volunteered to do Friday the 16th.

 

Rose isn’t housebroken yet; so I took her out several times to encourage her to go outside. I was alone as far as other humans, and my daughter and granddaughter were about 60 miles away, on a school bus and then museum field trip. I live about 60 miles the other way from their home. It had been raining off and on and the ground and grass and driveway and mud were all pretty wet. My other trips outside with Rose that morning had been fine. I only had a thin shirt on, no extra shirt or jacket. I did not think I would be out in the yard very long.

 

Rose pulled on the leash too exuberantly, as she does often (she is five and a half months old, and has had puppy obedience training, but is in dire need of more of it). I slipped on a muddy and grassy slope. My right leg went out in front of me, and I fell on my rear end. My left leg folded underneath my thigh and toward my rear, and my weight, which is a lot, crunched it. It was bent backward way further than a knee is supposed to bend. I screamed bloody murder. I was afraid to even try to get up, as I thought I had probably torn a ligament or two.

 

Rose thought it was play time and was all over me. There was not a thing in sight that would give me any leverage to hold me up or to help me get up. I sat and I pondered what to do. My daughter and Anna Leigh would not be home for nearly 6 more hours. I thought, well I’ll just call 911 (the emergency number where we live). Wrong! No cell phone with me. It was inside their house, being charged up; ironically so it would be ready when I needed it.

 

I tried yelling for help. Nothing! A neighbor about a half an acre away, was mowing, and every time the mower cut off, I tried screaming for help. He must have had headphones on or something. Cars would drive by on the road way down the driveway, and I would yell, but no one had their windows down on that day. Did you know that when you have upper dentures and no lower ones, and you yell really hard, that it blows the upper dentures right out of your mouth? When I tried to hang onto them to keep them in my mouth, I was unable to cry out very loudly. I just thought I would throw that little trivia in. I didn’t know until that day.

 

I knew I couldn’t make it back in the house. There were too many upward slopes and an exposed aggregate patio and a few stairs. The front of the house was even worse, as it had more stairs. I looked down the driveway and saw a vehicle which had some metal protrusions, on the order of spare tire holder or something like that. I decided to try to scoot on my rear down to that metal thing. I thought perhaps it would give me leverage to get up. Rose thought that it was great fun to romp on and around me.

 

I thought the four chickens would be afraid to come around Rose. No, they are not very intelligent. They came right up to me and Rose and started pecking on me. I had never been pecked on my chickens before, and there I was on the ground with no help and Rose alternating between trying to attack the chickens and trying to play with me. Rose’s playfulness sort of resembles an attack, anyway. I scooted faster, much faster.

 

There was a light rain, but it was getting a little heavier. There was also a dusting of snow mixed with the rain. I was wondering how long it would take to get Exposure. I was wondering about Shock also. Can a person who has Exposure or Shock know that they have it? Ominous looking clouds were blowing quickly toward me. It was 1:30 P. M. when I fell. I didn’t have my phone, but I had my watch.

 

I scooted methodically toward the vehicle closest to me. I think it was about 100 feet. I got to it, and thought if worse came to worse with the weather, I could roll under the back of it. I did not relish thought of cold dark ground and spiders, but thought it might be better to risk them than the weather. I saw some wide strapping tape on the spare tire, which was loose. I didn’t want to risk hoisting myself up on the spare and its frame, as it was quite loose. But I took the tape and wrapped it around the metal thing that was separate from the spare tire things, and made it softer for my arm to lean on. I tried to prop myself up. No use; I fell back down. Not enough leverage. I put Rose’s leash handle on the trailer hitch. I didn’t want to just let her run free and maybe get hit by a car.

 

I tried again to get up and made it to both knees. It hurt so badly I went back down again. I noticed the license plate on the vehicle renewed on the ninth month of 2011. That said 911. I thought, “Oh yeah right, you inanimate license plate. Go ahead and taunt me! You know I can’t call 911.” I got a chuckle out of my own joke, and gave myself a figurative pat on the back for being resourceful about trying to get up.

 

I tried again. I got on both knees but the right one was in gravel that really hurt. Then I thought which knee should I put forward and which one should I try to rise on. I tried one, and it didn’t seem as if it would work so I tried the other way. That wasn’t the right way either. Finally I tried the first way again. I told myself on the count of three I would stand up, even if it hurt excruciatingly, I would scream but I would still get up. False start! Down again! I tried again and got up. I was standing!

 

Now was the problem of how to go anywhere, not knowing if my left knee would buckle at any time. I thought I had to try. I spotted my own truck further down the driveway, and decided to try to make it to it. I walked between two vehicles very carefully and slowly and got to my truck. I unlocked it with the remote key which I had in my pocket. After 11 years of driving it, the seat is pretty well conformed to me; so I didn’t have to bend my knees to sit down in it. I just leaned into the seat and put my relatively good right leg in. It was painful to bend my left knee to get it in the truck, but I did. Rose was still tied to a trailer hitch further back in the yard, but she was safe.

 

I looked at my watch. It was 3:30 P. M. It took me two hours to stand up and to get to some degree of safety and warmth. I could drive, as my truck is automatic. I drove down the road to a house that Anna had pointed out was where a schoolmate lived. I thought I could ask them to go in my daughter’s house and get my cell phone for me. There was a very large barking dog in the driveway, and no sign of humans, and the mother of the schoolmate has never even met me. I decided to go back to Jennifer’s home.

 

I found a cane in my truck that a charity, a different one than the one later in my story, had given me a few months ago. It is not a very sturdy one, but better than nothing. I did not use it on a regular basis. I used the hook end of it to fetch a large stick lying near the driveway (larger than a normal hiking stick). I pulled it to me, and stood back up out of the truck and used the big stick and the cane and balanced against two vehicles, and decided to try to get back in the house. I did. I got in the recliner and pulled a blanket up over me and slept until they got home.

 

After they got home, we all decided to go to the nearest Emergency room. It was a Friday night by then, and no normal doctor’s hours. We went to one closest to them, but it was still about 27 miles or so. They checked me out and did an x-ray. I told the Physician’s assistant nurse type lady about my knee history. She was fun and nice and caring and a little bit of a comedienne. She said that my left knee was really “ratty” looking on the x-ray. I laughed, because I’m sure it was. I have just never, in all my doctor visits ever had a nurse refer to one of my body parts as “ratty”. I suspect it is not a medical term. They said I sprained my knee, and gave me some medical records to take up to the emergency room (or my doctor) closer to where I live, seventeen miles from my home, the other direction from Jen & Anna. I wanted to be closer to the doctors and hospital that I know. I was given a prescription similar to Vicodin. Someone kindly pointed out that Walgreen’s was visible about a block away and their drive-thru was open. At that point I was still getting around by hobbling and by leaning on Jennifer. So I sat in a chair and she and Anna and Rose drove over to Walgreen’s . It seems as if it took a long time for them get the prescription filled.

 

While I was sitting there waiting, a employee came out to the lobby with clipboard in hand and asked if I were the lady with an injured knee. I replied that I was. She said, OK, come with me and we’ll have you see a triage. I thought it odd that I had already been seen and now they wanted to start all over again. I told her I had already been seen and x-rayed and all. It turned out there was another lady in the waiting room with an injured knee. It probably would have blown the Physician’s Assistant’s mind if I had played dumb and gone through everything again, and then told her when she looked shocked, “I’m coming through again; and this time don’t call my knee “ratty! Funny to imagine, but not a good idea.

 

Finally, my daughter and granddaughter returned to the hospital waiting room. Jennifer had forgotten her checkbook. So back they went and then it turned out, Jennifer couldn’t sign for my prescription, and she didn‘t have my insurance information. Thus, we all drove back over there. I was in line ahead of Jen‘s car. I told the pharmacist that my window did not go down well on the driver’s side, and I could not reach the pills in the drawer. So I would give him paperwork and cards he needed, but to please leave the pills themselves in the slide-out drawer. I said my daughter was right behind me and her window worked; and she would pick them up with my permission. Walgreen’s closed at 10 P. M. and it was about 9:57 P. M. Finally she got the pain pills in the drawer, but when we got out of Walgreen’s I flagged her down to stop and be sure to give me the pills to have with me before we forgot. Jennifer got them and handed them over to me. We laughed about how, at that time of night, it looked for the entire world like some sort of illegal drug deal.

 

We tried to go out for dinner, and the restaurant we chose put the closed sign in their front window as we were approaching. That always makes one feel so welcome, not!

 

Saturday, I rested, and then Sunday they took me to Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center. I had called my normal doctor, and he was out of the country (probably on some Doctors without Borders type thing). He participates in many good will efforts. The doctor filling in for him said to go to the Emergency Room. So I did, and they did an MRI, and I had torn the meniscus in my left knee. I ended up in the hospital for 8 days. No surgery was done to repair anything, because of the dental situation. But I got a walker, and some really nice nurses and physical therapy. I saw all kinds of doctors, and Home Health care people, and Senior and Disabled specialists. They must have taken my blood pressure 100 times, it seems. They always seem surprised that it is very good.

 

Anna Leigh, who is seven years old, threw a coin in the Hospital Fountain and made good wishes for me. She is such a sweetie. My daughter helped to clean up my place so when I went home the walker would fit through the rooms. I don’t know what I do without Jen and Anna. The first few days out of the hospital, I taught Anna how to play Monopoly, and she and Jennifer and I also did puzzles. There were some quality family moments. At one point I was eating a chip or cracker of some kind with my right hand, and trying to place a puzzle piece with my left hand. I got absentminded and stuck the puzzle piece in my mouth. I realized what I had done because the food tasted like cardboard. I took it out of my mouth. Anna about went into hysterics over it. I was laughing too. Anna’s Daddy called Jen about that time, and wanted to know what the laughter was all about. Anna wrote a note to show her Mom so her Mom could tell her Dad what happened. She spelled it phonetically, as she is only in first grade. I think she does really well, but Jen and I cracked up over how much Anna was laughing and over what she wrote. She wrote, “My grandmuther ate a pussel pees.” It looked substantially nastier than it was. Jen and I were cracking up about the note. Anna thought we were still laughing about the event itself, not the note. In any case, we all had some great belly laughs. Since the belly bone is no doubt connected to the brain bone and the knee bone, I think it was very healthy for us.

 

At first a physical therapist helped me in the hospital with a walker and with some small steps. After a few days, I could roam around the hallways on my own with the walker. At that point I took my camera. As I was practicing with my walker I took a number of pictures. I tried very hard to only shoot artsy type things and nothing about any patients or doctors that would invade their privacy. I had a bulletin board in my room just about me. I wrote “Exemplary Patient Award” on the comments. I wanted to see if it would make the nurses laugh. I thought it was funny to give myself an award. I enjoy making people laugh. I was curious if they would erase it, but it was still there when I was discharged.

 

I graduated from the walker to a cane yesterday. A home health physical therapist came to see how I was doing, and brought me a very colorful cane. I like it. It suits me, and it is brand new. There is a charity in my area called Love, Inc. I don’t know if it is just local or nationwide. Anyway, they gave him the cane to bring to me. Really super! Of course, I need to take a photo of it, and add it to this set. I’ll probably do that in the daylight.

 

I am still in surgical limbo, but a charity is going to come out and install grab bars on my shower, and still another charity will build up my recliner (which I sleep in) with a platform so it will be easier to get in and out of. It was suggested that I donate enough to cover the cost of the supplies but not the labor. I will probably make a donation, but I haven’t decided how much yet. I’m going to call my Congressman to see if something can be done about covering some dental procedures. I know him personally. He collects vintage cars, and has at least one Dodge and well over 10 Buicks. When I had a hubcap store, he would drop by and buy hubcaps for some of them. We would chat about politics, and automobiles, and high rent, etc. He probably won‘t be able to help, but I feel I have to try. Not just for me, but for a multitude of people.

 

I’ll close with a quote, although I don’t know who said it, “Be True to your Teeth and they will Never be False to You.” and “That is the Tooth, the whole Tooth, and Nothing but the Tooth.”

      

A recent thread at Asterisk (this is APOD's discussion forum) got me looking at this beautiful object and the data in Hubble's archive. I noticed there was a very intimate look at the center of this starburst galaxy featuring many bright, young stars comprising super star clusters and decided to process it, making sure not to over brighten the star clusters so that as many details would remain preserved as possible.

 

In the center is Cluster A, which is actually two clusters which are called A1 and A2. At lower left, the next brightest cluster is called Cluster B. To the upper right is Cluster C, which is somewhat enshrouded in nebula.

 

Other star clusters are also visible as dimmer, soft yellow blobs which almost look like elliptical galaxies because it's very hard to make out any individual members. I'm not sure what kind of star clusters those are. To me they look a lot like small globular clusters. One may be tempted to conclude that we are seeing the life cycle of globular clusters in some kind of holy grail moment, but something tells me that if that were the case it would have made headlines somewhere. Our knowledge about the formation of globular clusters is murky at best. Does NGC 1569 offer any insights?

 

This image is possible thanks to the following HST proposal:

Starburst Galaxies and Their Population of Super Star Clusters

 

Red: HST_10885_06_ACS_WFC_F658N_sci

Green: HST_9300_02_ACS_HRC_F555W_sci

Blue: HST_9300_02_ACS_HRC_F330W_sci

 

North is NOT up. It is 18.4° clockwise from up.

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