Please allow me to intro myself. I am Chair of the Communication Dept. at The Univ. of Texas - Pan American in Edinburg, Texas --- that's in what's called Deep (by God) South Texas. I'm about 18 miles North of Mexico just above McAllen in the Lower Rio Grande Valley (not really a valley, it more of a delta, like the Nile delta). My interest in Mark Twain springs from as association with Dr. Willian F. Strong, a member of our faculty who teaches speech-communication and who did his M.A. on the speeches of Twain (and who does a wonderful one-man Mark Twain show). Bill and I have been talking movies, which is my field. You can see from my signature block that I am List Owner of SCRNWRiT (pronounced SCREENWRITE), a discussion list for and about screenwriting. Over the last year I've become interested in writing a script about Twain, particularly the last 10 years of his life. So, I'm trying to steep myself in Mr. Clemens and write a script this fall. My first step is to develope an timeline of events from the death of Clemens wife until his own death. Along the way I'm interested in observations about the relationship between Clemens and Paine (sp?), as well as between Clemens and Twitchell, Clemens and Ms. Lyons, and Clemens and his last two daughters. Please excuse my ignorance because I come to this group without much depth in the subject, but with a serious and abiding love for both the man and his contributions to the American character. My position is that I don't believe he ever understood, as many humorist do not, the significance and lasting value of the joy he have to his own time and to positarity. If you know the film SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS, it says some of what I'd like to say about Mark Twain --- basically that, those who give us laughter give us more than merely a smile, they give us medicine for our pains, a tonic for our spirits, and the richest food possible for our souls. Jack R. Stanley The Univ. of Texas-Pan American