Hello Puget Sound searchers, Virtue is its own reward <she said smugly> I went looking for Capt. Puget - for whom I have fond memories - and found him. The web site for the Don McCune Library is below and I copied part of the section about his Capt. Puget persona. However, what I found in the process was an AWESOME search engine. Listen up! For obscure searches like dead local celebrities, I have been using a big search engine called dogpile - it takes a long time to load but it searches 12 search engines at one time and has access to about 6 more. I nearly always find what I want. So I typed in www.dogpile.org/ and sat back to wait. Whoosh! Instant load and I'm looking at something called 37.com with a simple screen and a place to type in your keywords. Typed in "don mccune" - hit search - and whoosh! instant load and first choice is the Don McCune library. 37.com searches 37 search engines - every one I have ever heard of and a few I haven't. I am breathless. http://37.com/ Ok - have to go now and look for obscure dead ancestors on 37.com Diane Shoreline Mailto:dhettrick@earthlink.net http://web3.foxinternet.net/donmccune/ http://web3.foxinternet.net/donmccune/History.htm Captain Puget ~ 1957-1966 In 1957, KOMO-TV in Seattle asked Don to be Captain Puget, the skipper of the 'Windward Four', taking northwest children on television voyages around Puget Sound and singing sea chanteys. For nearly ten years this daily live broadcast sailed the northwest airwaves. Don was fondly known as Captain Puget for the rest of his life.