These are some of the people that have helped make ARP a reality: Scott Ballantyne, who did much of the work developing arp.library, and many of the command replacements, and maintained interest in the ARP project during spring '87 when my interest had waned. Without Scott, there would be no ARP. Harold W. Norris, who coined the term "ARP" in the early BIX discussions of ARP. Chuck McManis, who implemented Assign and Info in C, tackling the tough BCPL data structures I didn't want to touch! Willy Langeveld, who helped out with wildcards and several other C programs. John Toebes, who wrote the final wildcard functions which solved our dilemma of which sort of wildcards to support. John also provided inspiration that the ARP project could be a sucess by his interest in developing a faster filesystem. Les Noland, who is the ultimate Beta-Tester. If you ever want something smoked out to the max, Les is your man. Larry Phillips, our CIS connection. Brian Dueck, who is working on Modula-II library bindings. Chris Nicotra, who is working on Manx C library bindings. David Milligan, my old pal, another Beta tester. Joanne Dow, who has been subjected to N^15 different versions of arp.library. Honest, Joanne, any new versions will be backwards compatible with this one! Bill Hawes, who is working on a replacement for dos.library, the Third Pillar in the quest for a New DOS. Andy Finkel at Commodore, who we have been pestering for the past 9 months trying to get Commodore to pick up ARP for use on the WorkBench diskette, and without whom we would probably not have implemented ARP in a manner to attempt to be 100% backwards compatible with the original BCPL command programs. Many other people I'm sure I've forgotten as I drift off to sleep after sealing the write-protect notch on V1.0 of ARP. To all these people, thank you! ...cheath