SKID ROW

presents

STAR CONTROL

INSTRUCTION CARD FOR AMIGA

Important Note: This command card pertains pertinent information for
using the Amiga version of Star Control. You should still refer to the
enclosed manual, but note the changes indicated here. Any page number
below refers to the page number in the manual where change occurs.

How to Install Star Control
(Page 1)

System Requirements

To play Star Control, you need the following:

o 1 megabyte of memory.
o If loading from a hard drive, you will need 800K of free RAM
after Workbench is loaded.
o A blank formatted disk to save games (if playing from floppy disks).

Back up Your Game Disks!

The program comes without on-disk copy protection. We highly recommend
that you make back-ups of the program disks, and store the originals in
a safe, dry place. Refer to your Amiga manual for the correct procedure.

Note: Make sure to rename the copies so that they are the same as
the originals. For example, after copying Disk 1, rename the copy
from "copy of Star Control Disk 1" to "Star Control Disk 1". Do
the same for Disk 2.

Installation For a Hard Drive

To install Star Control on your hard drive, do the following:

1 Enter CLI.
2 Insert Star Control disk 1 into df0:.
3 Type cd dh0: and press Return.
4 Type execute df0:hdinstall and press Return.
5 Swap disks when instructed to do so.

Note: Use your copies when installing Star Control to a hard drive.

Starting the Game
(Page 3)

From a Hard Drive System:

From Workbench, double click on the Star Control folder, then double
click on the Star Control icon.


From a Single Floppy Drive System:

1 With your computer off, insert Star Control Disk 1 into drive df0:.
2 Turn on the computer. The program will load automatically.
3 When prompted, insert Disk 2 into df0:. (You will not have to swap
disks again.)


From a Dual Floppy Drive System:

1 With your computer off, insert Disk 1 into drive df0:.
2 Insert Disk 2 into drive df1: (or df2: for Amiga 2000).
3 Turn on the computer. The program will load automatically.


To Boot from Workbench:

Insert Disk 1 into drive df0:. Double click on the Disk 1 icon, then
double click on the Star Control icon.

Keyboard Cursor Controls
(Page 7)

Up Cursor Arrow - Moves highlight
Down Cursor Arrow - Moves highlight
Left Cursor Arrow - Moves highlight
Right Cursor Arrow - Moves highlight
RETURN key - Selects Highlighted Option


Joystick Cursor Controls

Note: Any reference in the manual to "button #1" means the fire
button, since there is only one fire button for Amiga joystick
play. Also, the joystick must be plugged into port 2 for one
player joystick control. For a two player game using two joysticks,
a second joystick can be plugged into port 1 (mouse port), but must
be done BEFORE going beyond the copy protection screen (Professor
Zorg's Guide to Alien Etiquette).

Joystick Ship Controls
(Page 8)

UP
Thrust
UP / LEFT | UP / RIGHT
Thrust & Rotate Left \ | / Thrust & Rotate Right
\ | /
\|/
LEFT --(_)-- RIGHT
Rotate /|\ Rotate
/ | \
DOWN / LEFT / | \ DOWN / RIGHT
Special Power and Rotate Left | Special Power and Rotate Right
DOWN
Special Power

(Hierarchy and Alliance joystick controls are identical)


Other Special Controls

F3 - Does NOT turn sound on / off. Simply turn the volume up / down
on your monitor.

Saving a Game in Progress

1 Press F7.
2 If running from a floppy disk, insert a formatted disk into drive
df0:.
3 Select a number from 1-9 to identify a saved game, and type it.
4 Type a name for the saved game, then press Enter.
5 When the save is complete, you're returned to the Fleet Command
View.

Keyboard Configuration Utility
(Page 49)

The Keyboard Configuration Utility - Keys - lets you reconfigure the
keys you'll use as the control keys in Star Control. To use, double
click the Star Control Disk 1 icon from Workbench (Star Control folder
if installed on the hard drive) and then double click on the Keys icon.

Scenario Editor
(Page 50)

The Scenario Editor Utility - Edit - allows you to modify the scenarios
which came with the game, and even create new scenarios entirely of your
own design. To use, double click on the Star Control Disk 1 icon
(Star Control folder if installed on a hard drive) and then double click
on the Edit icon.

(Page 51)

F10 - To exit the program

=============================================================================

STAR CONTROL

Typed in by ZODACT of RAZOR 1911. Edited by PARASITE.


STAR CONROL is a science-fiction wargame which pits the forces of The
Alliance of Free Stars against those of the predatory Ur-Quan Hierarchy. The
game is designed so that you can ease into play, familiarizing yourself
with menus, options, and player controls.

The Alliance and Hierarchy each possess seven different types of warships.
Each vessel has its own maneuvering and firing characteristics, plus a
unique special power that you can employ when circumstances dictate.

[These are the most important docs you need for the game, the other
imformation is either incredibly easy to figure out, description, or just
plain irrelevent to game play]

KEYBOARD CURSOR CONTROLS
Arrow keys move the highlighter
Return key selects highlighted option

JOYSTICK SHIP CONTROLS

THRUST
UP LEFT UP UP/RIGHT
THRUST & ROT LEFT\ | / THRUST & ROT RIGHT
\ | /
\ | /
LEFT-------O-------RIGHT
ROTATE / | \ ROTATE
/ | \
/ | \DOWN/RIGHT
DOWN/LEFT DOWN
SPECIAL POWER

KEYBOARD SHIP CONTROLS
Default Flight Control (can be reconfigured with KEYS utility)

Hierarchy Alliance

Special 1 N
Rotate Left 2 M
Rotate Right 3 ,
Thrust 4 .
Fire 5 ?

OTHER SPECIAL CONTROLS
[SPACEBAR] Cancels last selection [in FULL game only]
[F1] Pause/Resume game
[F10] Exit any mode of play

SAVING A GAME IN PROGRESS
1) Press F7
2) If running from a floppy disk, insert a formatted disk into DF0:
3) Select a number from 1-9 to identify a saved game, and type it.
4) Type a name for the saved game, then press ENTER.
5) When the save is complete, you're returned to the Fleet Command View.

KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION UTILITY
The configuration utility - KEYS - lets you reconfigure the keys you'll use
as the control keys in STAR CONTROL. To use, double click the STAR CONTROL
Disk 1 icon from Workbench and then double click on the KEYS option.

SCENARIO EDITOR
The scenario editor utility - EDIT - allows you to modify the scenarios
which came with the game, and even create new scenarios entirely of your
own design. To use, double click on the STAR CONTROL Disk 1 icon and then
double click on the EDIT icon.

SETTING PLAYER OPTIONS

CONTROL OPTIONS-->
Control options determine who controls the Hierarchy and Alliance sides in
both strategic and combat modes. Control options are:

HUMAN- The human player [YOU] totally controls the side, making all
strategic decisions and fighting all battles.

COMPUTER- The computer totally controls the side. The computer controls
ship selection in Practice and Melee, as well as Fleet Command in
Full Game.

CYBORG- The human player makes strategic choices. But when battle occurs,
the computer takes over full combat responsibility.

PSYTRON- The human player fights all battles, while the computer decides
all strategy.

FULL GAME
Full game combines strategic play with arcade-action combat. You develop
resources, build colonies, purchase ships, fortfy stars, and plot moves
through space while your opponent is carrying out a similar set of actions.
Both sides compete to achieve superior strategic position, so that combat
occurs on advantageous terms.

Play is divided into turns, alternating between Hierarchy and Alliance. On
a players turn he can perform three [3] actions, such as moving a ship,
building a new ship, or developing a mine or colony.

The game ends when one player fulfills his side's victory conditions.
Total destruction of the enemy always results in a victory, though not
necessarily the easiest victory.

THE ROTATING STARFIELD
The rotating starfield is a spatial world, multi-dimensional and moving
about a vertical axis. It takes some time before your eyes adjust to this
environment, as your view constantly changes.

STARS
Stars are colored according to the kind of planets which orbit them.
Unexplored stars are indicated in blue. When you move a ship to an
unexplored star, it changes color. A purple star indicates a mineral
planet, a green star a colonizable planet, and a gray star a dead planet.

MINERAL WORLDS
Mineral worlds are hot, heavy, dense planets and contain metals, ores,
sulphurs, and other compounds which may be exploited for mining. When
these minerals are prosessed, they generate starbucks which allow you to
build and power new ships.

LIFE WORLDS
Life worlds are green and temperate planets resembling the Earth. They
contain plenty of water and oxygen, and are ideal locations for a race to
build colonies.

DEAD WORLDS
Dead worlds are rocky wastes wich never possessed atmospheres - or had them
obliterated in some cosmic calamity. A dead world can be fortified by a
resourceful planner.

SHIPS
The number of ships each player starts with depends on the scenario chosen.
If you have a starbase, you can buy new ships, and can have up to seven
ships in your fleet.

STARBASES
A starbase is a large, slow-moving space station at which you can build new
starships.

NOTE: It is recommended that you guard starbases with at least one combat
vessel. An undefended starbase is automatically destroyed if an enemy
ship reaches it.

INSTALLATIONS
A primary activity in the Full Game is building installations which aid the
player in conquering star clusters:

COLONIES [DIAMONDS]
FORTIFICATIONS [SQUARES]
MINES [PLUS SIGNS]

COLONIES
A colony, established on a life world, provides a place for a ship to
recruit new members to replace those lost in combat. Colonies also speed
ship movement, since moving from a colony world does not cost an action.
This benefit does not apply to Starbases.

MINES
Mines, established on mineral worlds, earn the side developing that world's
resources Starbucks at a rate of one per turn. [Your starbase also
generates one Starbuck per turn]

FORTIFICATIONS
You establish fortifications as a defensive web through which no single
ship can pass or easily destroy. [With the exception of the Arilou Skiff
and the Ur-Quan dreadnought!]. Fortifications protect colonies and mines,
and may block an attack route to a starbase. Should a single ship move
into a fortification, it is stuck. To free it, it must successfully
besiege or be joined by a second ship which will automatically destroy the
fort at the end of the turn.

DESTROYING ENEMY INSTALLATIONS
You destroy an undefended enemy colony, mine, or fortification by moving
onto it with any ship. Alternately, if you defeat all enemy ships in
battle which are guarding an installation, you automatically destroy it.
In some scenarios, complete destrucation of one type of installation may
resuly in the victory of your side.

PRECURSOR RELICS
In full game, you can discover Precursor knowledge tablets conataining the
imprint of valuable technological relics. These age-old, still functional
devices left in stasis cubbies by the Precursor cultures.

There is a random chance you may find a Precursor tablet each time that
your ship lands on an unexplored star. When your ship finds a relic, it is
added to the ship's structure. The vessel immediately improves in an area
of ship performance.

Whenever you gain a Precursor tablet, the relic is indicated by a
silhouetted letter which appears on the discovering ship. The letters and
improvements are:

[F] - Fuel Packs Attached. Your ship's maximum fuel is now increased.

[C] - Crew Pods Added. You now have increassed crew capacity, but to gain
more crew you must recruit at a colony.

[D] - Dynamo Attached. Improves fuel regeneration.

[T] - Thrusters attached. Improves fuel regeneration.

[J] - Control Jets Attached. Improves turning.

SCENARIO DESCRIPTIONS

1] BEGINNER'S LUCK. An introductory scenario in which you learn to
establish forts and mines; few ships and stars are found. Either side is
victorious when its forces completely destroy the enemy.

2] FIRST ENCOUNTER. The two sides square off with modest, evenly-balanced
forces. A moderate number of stars populate space. You colonize and build
ships, and win by achieving total destruction of enemy forces.

3] EXTERMIATE. The Shofixti - starting with a few colonies, a starbase,
and six ships - confront an Ur-Quan foe with a sole fortified colony and a
single Dreadnought. The Hierarchy player wins by destroying all enemy
colonies or eliminating all enemy forces; the Shofixti must kill the
Ur-Quan Dreadnought.

4] ESCALATION. Each side starts with a single starbase, 25 starbucks, and
no ships. Use your cunning, expanding slowly and building fortifications.
Also possible: a "blitzkrieg" against the opponent's starbase. You win by
completely destroying the enemy.

5] THE ART OF WAR. Both players begin with a limited number of ships. An
overall balance of forces exists; however, Art of War features a series of
individual matchups that contrast individual ships' strengths and
weaknesses. Win by destroying the enemy's starbase.

6] ONSLAUGHT. A Dreadnought Armade, unattached to any starbase [thus
without ship-building powers] rampages through an Alliance stronghold. The
Ur-Quans capitalize on an initial advantage to destroy Alliance ships,
mines, and colonies. If Alliance forces survive to build new ships, they
try to tilt the odds against the Dreadnoughts. Alliance victory occurs
with the destruction of all Ur-Quan ships.

7] TOTAL WAR. An enhancement of Melee mode, Total War pits the seven
Hierarchy vessels against the full roster of Alliance ships. there are no
starbases, so neither side can build new vessels. The player who
colonizes, explores, and fortifies most effectively gains the upper hand.
Win by total destruction of the foe.

8] SPATHI LESSON. Their Ur-Quan masters have sent the Spathi to destroy a
Mmrnmhrm mining outpost. The Hierarchy side wins if the Spathi pulverize
all Mmrnmhrm mines; the Alliance must eliminate all Hierarchy ships to
triumph.

9] COUNTER ATTACK. This time, the Hierarchy is on the defensive as
Alliance vessels invade Ur-Quan space. The Alliance has money and a lone
Chenjesu ship. The Hierarchy have ships and income from mines, but no
money. You must destroy the enemy to win.

End.

=============================================================================


S t a r C o n t r o l

Documentation


Docs written by The Byter. This has been an Alternative Release.



Star Control is, at its very basic core, a modern version of the arcade classic
"Space War". Star Control gives you the option of choosing from a number of
ships, different depending on which "side" of the game you are playing, and
provides a strategic game as well.

The first menu displays the player setup for each side - the Hierarchy (bad
guys) on one side, and the Alliance on the other. Control indicates who does
the playing, and Using indicates keyboard or joystick (for a human player).
The options available from this menu are:

Practice -- Action battle between two ships. This is good for getting to
know how one ship will fare against another. The battles will
continue until you press F10 to exit. When one ship is killed,
another of the same type will replace it.
Melee -- Practice battle - one fleet against another fleet. You and
your opponent get one of each type of ship, and match them up
against each other. When one of your ships is destroyed, you
get to pick the replacement. A ship will remain in battle
until it is destroyed, or no enemies remain.
Full Game -- Strategic planning as well as battles. See the section below.
Set Players -- Choose player setups. See below.
Quit -- No fun. Self-explanatory



The first option you will use is Set Players. The screen is replaced by a
similar menu, showing Hierarchy on the left, Alliance on the right, and a box
marked "OK" in the centre. Moving to the left allows you to choose who plays
the Hierarchy forces (and vice-versa to the right). You can choose one of four
choices for the player - Human (human controls strategy and battles), Computer
(Computer controls strategy and battles), Cyborg (Computer controls battles,
human controls strategy), and Psytron (Computer controls strategy, human does
the battles). When Human is selected, you can choose keyboard or joystick
control. When one of the computer or computer-assisted players is chosen, you
get to choose the skill of the computer player. Make your choices for both
sides, and hit the OK button in the centre of the screen.


Battles
~~~~~~~
Once you have set the players up, you will want to start a battle. Select
Practice to get some combat experience. You will be prompted for one ship
and then the opponent. If your opponent is a computer player, the computer
will randomly select a ship. Pressing the "Special Action" key (or button #2
on the joystick) will give detailed information about the ship. Pressing the
"Fire" key (button #1) will select that ship for the battle.

Once you begin the battle, it is to the death. There is no withdrawl (although
you may hit F10 to abort it). Control is the straightforward "Asteroids" type
control - left, right, thrust, fire, and "Special". The special ability varies
from ship to ship, and can be quite useful.

Battles take place on a starfield and a planet. Moving off the edge of the
screen will move the players onto another section of the starfield. Avoid
planets for the most part, as they do have a strong gravitational pull which
can pull a ship to its doom. Planets can be used for a speed boost if you
approach them in a slingshot manner, and can also be used to "hide" behind
if an enemy with guided missiles is after you.

Only one ship can square off at a time against an opponent. If there are a
number of ships in a battle, they will take their turn, one at a time.

To the right of the battle screen, there is a status display showing the
Hierarchy ship on the top, the Alliance vessel on the bottom. This display
will show a diagram of the ship, the race of the crew, and the name of the
ship. On the left side is a black bar with green dots stacked inside. This
is a measure of the maximum crew the ship can hold, and the green dots show
the current crew compliment. If your ship looses all its crew, it will be
destroyed. On the right is a similar black bar, but this one contains red
dots. This indicates how much fuel the ship has. Fuel is used for firing the
main weapons and for using the special ability. Fuel will regenerate as time
goes on. At the bottom of the vessel diagram is a cockpit view of the crew.
This serves no practical purpose, but it gives you a feeling for what kind of
being serves aboard a certain vessel.


Strategic Game
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For the strategic game, you will play one of the packaged scenarios or one
designed with the Scenario Editor. You will be presented with a three-
dimensional rotating star map which will show the relative distances between
stars as it rotates. It may take some getting used to, but once you figure it
out it is quite easy to understand.

Each star is represented by a dot on the screen, and each can have a different
planet composition. These are:

Dead World - These can be fortified to build a barrier against enemy forces,
but are useless for resources.
Live World - These can be colonized to provide a source of additional crew
for damaged ships. They are represented by a diamond (blue for
Alliance, red for Hierarchy) once they have been colonized.
Mining World - Building mines provides the local currency - StarBucks - for
use in building new ships. A completed mine is represented by
a plus sign.

Ships and Starbases may only move where there is a world, and can only jump
from one planet to an adjacent one. Any planet may be fortified, which puts a
small box around the planet (enclosing the diamond or plus, if any) to indicate
that it is fortified. A fortification must be destroyed by enemy forces before
they may pass beyond it.

When you choose a ship to control, you have a few options. The first one is
to move to another location. When you select this, one to four blue lines
will appear connecting the current star to available destinations. The light
blue line is the currently selected one. Pressing the fire button will move to
the selected star, moving left/right moves the selection, and the Special key
will abort the move. The status of a currently selected ship will be displayed
with the ship type, name, and crew/fuel status.

Occasionally, when moving into an unexplored sector, a ship may uncover some
artifact left by the Precursors. These give better thrusters, more crew
capacity, fuel capacity, and the like.

Other options include COLONIZE or MINE, if it is an uninhabited world suitable
for either purpose, RECRUIT if the ship is low on crew and orbiting a colony,
BESEIGE if the ship is orbiting an enemy fortification, FORTIFY, which attempts
to build a fortification around the current planet, and SCUTTLE which will
destroy a damaged vessel. Options in black are not available for selection.
Options in red are "currently in process", and should not be disturbed.
Options shown in white are currently available. Starships also have the option
to BUILD new starships. At the bottom of the screen are three yellow jewels,
which indicate how many "moves" the player has left. Some actions, such as
moving a starship, require all moves for that turn. Other actions, such as
moving a Shofixti, require a fraction of a move.


Strategic Scenarios
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are about 9 scenarios which are packaged with the game, and more can be
developed with the included Scenario Editor. The victory conditions for the
various scenarios vary, but are usually "Destroy the Enemy" in some form or
another. Here are some brief descriptions of the canned scenarios:

Beginner's Luck - The Hierarchy has an Androsynth Starbase, and the Alliance
has a single Syreen starship. The Syreen must quickly
destroy the starbase before more Androsynths can be built.
Time is on the Hierarchy's side, as they can produce more
ships. The Syreen must act quickly and decisively.
Escalation - The game starts with two starbases, and nothing more. Each
side must build forces, colonize worlds, build mines, and
ultimately destroy the enemy starbase.
Total War - No starbases exist for either side. Each side has a full
fleet containing ONE ship of each race. Match your ships
against the opponent they will be most effective against.
First Encounter - Each player begins with a starbase, three battleships, and
one colony and one mine. Expand and produce, or quickly
trounce the enemy while his defenses are weak.
The Art of War - Each side has a starbase and a few battleships. The
Alliance can only build Syreen and Arilou ships, while the
Hierarchy has access to Androsynth and Mycon vessels. Each
ship type is valuable against an enemy type, and nearly
totally defenseless against the other.
Proving Ground - The Alliance begins with a starbase, a few battleships, and
a number of colonies and mines. The Hierarchy has a base
and a few Spathi cruisers. The Hierarchy must destroy the
poorly defended mines and colonies with only Spathi ships,
and the Alliance must defend against the threat with its
supply of Mmrnmhrn vessels. The Alliance may build non-
Mmrnmhrn vessels if it has the StarBucks.
Exterminate! - The Hierarchy has one Ur-Quan dreadnought which must invade
the Alliance sector populated by the Shofixti. The Shofixti
must somehow destroy the dreadnought with their tiny vessels
and may build additional Shofixti to help.
Onslaught - The Hierarchy has five Ur-Quan dreadnoughts with which to
invade Alliance space and destroy the poorly defended mines
and colonies. The Alliance has a starbase to build extra
Alliance vessels to defend itself and destroy all the Ur-
Quan ships.
Counter Attack - The Alliance has one Chenjesu ship (and a starbase) with
which to attack Hierarchy space. The Hierarchy has a base,
a few ships, and a shitload of mines and colonies. If too
much time is spent, the Hierarchy will be able to build a
massive fleet.


The Vessels
~~~~~~~~~~~

The Hierarchy vessels at your disposal are:

Mycon Podship - large ship with long-range homing plasma blast. Slow. Can
grow additional crew.
Spathi Discriminator - medium sized crew, small fuel bays. Replaces fuel
slowly. Fires short range missiles from the rear (good for fleeing)
and has a weak blaster. Very quick and agile.
Androsynth Guardian - Attacks with homing "bubbles" which are a pain to evade.
Can also turn into a "comet".
Vux Intruder - Very slow and has a large fuel capacity. Has a VERY powerful
short range lazer which destroys nearly anything. Can also generate
leeches which attatch to enemy ships causing navigational problems.
Ilwrath Avenger - Quick at turning and accellerating. Has a short-range flame
thrower which does moderate damage. Has a cloaking device which makes
it invisible.
Umgah Drone - Small, weak, and slow, but turns quickly. Has a very short range
Anti-Matter cone weapon on the front. Very fast forward-firing
thrusters for quick escapes.
Ur-Quan dreadnought - huge ship and rather slow. Powerful front-firing weapon,
and can release small fighters as a special weapon. Stores a lot of
fuel and a large crew. Has a very long range weapon, and regenerates
fuel quickly.

Alliance ships include:

Chenjesu Broodhome - Slow and large, but boasting a long range and powerful
crystal weapon. Hold down the fire button as long as you want the
projectile to travel. When you release the button, it will burst into
smaller shards which do less damage, but can hit on a shot which would
otherwise miss. Can generate "sheep dogs" which will bump against an
enemy vessel draining it of fuel and knocking it off course. Sometimes
the dogs will even drive a ponderous enemy into a planet and destroy
it utterly.
Yehat Terminator - quick and agile, and boasting rapid fire twin missile
launchers. Very agile, and can activate a protective sheild.
Mmrnmhrn Xform - Two ships in one. In its first form, it is slow ship with a
powerful laser. In the second form, it has much quicker thrusters, but
cannot turn quickly. In the second form, it has two homing missiles
with medium range.
Ariloulaleelay Skiff - Small and extremely quick, this craft features an
inertialess propulsion system (no coasting after you end thrust). It
has a short range auto-aiming laser, and has a quick hyperspace option
for getaways. Takes some time to get the control down.
Syreen Penetrator - This ship (the phallic shape is intended) has a normal
navigational system, a poor quality forward-firing ejaculation
weapon, and low fuel capacity. It has a large crew capacity, however
it starts out with a skeleton crew. The special ability of the Syreen
is to send out a signal which causes enemy crew to abandon ship and
join the Syreen. Hit the feature button when you're close to an enemy,
and a number of little green dots will "bail out" of the enemy craft.
Swing around and pick these up, and add to your crew. Destroying an
enemy colony with a Syreen will garner a full crew.
Earthling Cruiser - A slow and ponderous ship. It carries a supply of homing
nuclear missiles with a long range, and do considerable damage. For
short range (and defense) there are the point defense lasers, which
can be used most effectively against other missiles and projectiles.
This ship can turn quickly, and is one of my favorites.
Shofixti Scount - A tiny extremely fast ship. Has a short range weapon. Its
special ability is self-destruct, which can damage enemies or even
destroy the massive Ur-Quan Dreadnought at close range.


Different ships have different capabilities and are strong against different
enemies. Experiment with them, and find out which ones you like for specific
enemies, and how to control them.

Excuse any typos or slight mistakes in this file. It was a quicky, so to
speak, and not as polished as my other doc efforts have been.

Greetings to everyone out there and their brothers. Special greetings to
Sir Reginald B. Magillicutty for releasing this fine ware.