Credits to:
----------

Clifford A. Adams, caadams@access.digex.net
--Author/maintainer of new code in "strn" (mainly the "scan" mode and
scoring code).

Wayne Davison 
--Author/maintainer of "trn".  Responsible for the threading features,
including the thread selector ('+').  He's also responsible for a
heroic amount of work on the Configure script, getting trn to work on
all kinds of weird systems.  Wayne has even occasionally modified trn
for greater compatability with strn.  It's been a lot of fun working
with him.

Larry Wall
--Author of the original "rn" package, starting in 1983.  While the
original "#ifdef PDP11" statements are gone, his coding style still
lives in much of strn.  [I sometimes wonder if he'll ever get around to
the long promised Perl version. ;]

Stan Barber	(current RN)
--Current maintainer of the "rn" package, currently at 4.4.4.  Many of
the newsgroup and article level commands were added by him, along with
many bugfixing patches.

Todd Day, todd@appmag.com
--Author of the original SubScan/"semicolon" mode.  The SubScan code
taught me a lot about how easily rn could be changed.

Dave Barr
--Brought the SubScan/"semicolon" code to my attention.

The Digital Express group, info@access.digex.net
--For providing an account and lots of captive beta testers (:-).
(My "home" account is now on their systems.)

Ed Kern, ejk@digex.net
--For suggestions, testing, advice, and even an account on a fast
machine for strn development/testing.

The Computing and Information Resources and Technology (CIRT) department
at the University of New Mexico (UNM)
--For excellent computing and USENET services in the earlier days of strn.

Steve Freed (at CIRT)
--For installing TRN, its thread database, and many other things to
create a great news environment.

Hans de Graaff, Delft U. of Technology, (J.J.deGraaff@IS.TWI.TUDelft.NL)
--For a lot of suggestions, advice, testing, and support, including
the first archival FTP site for strn.  Also the author of the "rn2trn"
guide for new trn users.

Chris Cipollone (Blade)
--For early testing, comments, and occasionally dragging me away from
the terminals for a taste of the "real world" (aka "the big blue room").

Chad Lundgren, lundgren@ariel.unm.edu
--For pre-alpha testing and many, many suggestions (some implemented).
  The first other pre-alpha tester of the scoring code.

Jeffrey Harper, firehawk@triton.unm.edu
--Early pre-alpha and alpha testing, and many suggestions.  Kept an
early stable copy of strn for local testers.

Chiping D. CHU ( The Luck Dragon )
Peter V. Gadjokov
Ron Tapia, tapia@hydra.unm.edu
--For a lot of testing and comments from early versions of strn through
the present.  Often one of the first testers of a new release.

Rich Salz
--For helpful early comments on the scorefile format
--Group scan mode uses a newsgroup pattern-matching routine based on
Rich Salz's wildmat, reduced to the simple case of * and text.  The
complete version can be found in Rich's INN, among other places; write
to <rsalz@uunet.uu.net>

Iain Lea (Iain.Lea%anl433.uucp@Germany.EU.net)
--Some general ideas from the TIN newsreader.
--Arrow key and pageUP/pageDOWN/HOME/END definitions.

Risto Kankkunen, University of Helsinki <Risto.Kankkunen@Helsinki.FI>
--Early ideas on a newsgroup selection mode, lots of testing.

Greg Earle
--For sending ready-to-go code patches, and lots of suggestions.

The writers of Gnu Emacs
--For a great feature-full editor.  The tags-query-replace function
alone saved days of recoding.

Finally, a big thank you to the alpha testing mailing list, including:
Michael J. Corrigan, SSCF, University of California, San Diego
Kian-Tat Lim, Caltech <ktl@wag.caltech.edu>
Pete Bevin (pete@sst.icl.co.uk)
Mike Hoffmann, Internet Manager SNI (Mike.Hoffmann@mch.sni.de)
Theodore W. Leung, Brown University (twl@cs.brown.edu)
Stephen Balbach, Clark Internet Services, Balt. & Wash D.C. (info@clark.net)
Tomaz Borstnar, ARNES <tomaz.borstnar@arnes.si>
Jon L. Spear (spear@cs.nps.navy.mil)
Matt Rollefson, Stanford University Residential Computing
  (draphsor@deathstar.stanford.edu)
Jaye Mathisen, (osyjm@cs.montana.edu)
Joseph E. Jesson (joe@netcom.com) 
Francis Bell (fgtbell@king.ac.uk)
Bryan Fullerton, Computer Variables Inc (neuro@cspace.comspec.com)
William M. Perry, UCS PCF Database Programmer (wmperry@indiana.edu)
Andrew Gross, San Diego Supercomputer Center (grossa@sdsc.edu)
Owen Medd, Msen, Inc. (osm@mail.msen.com)
Joseph R. Ammond, Computer Sciences Corporation (ammond@gdls.com)
Hannu Strang, <chs@apu.fi>
[and many more who declined to be mentioned.]
