Page 6 grave. Although her ribs and a few boa-rds are all you can see from the shore today, the underwater portion of the sunken schooner offers Cambridge Bay scuba divers a wonderous sight. Many of the original brass fittings are still visible and the icy waters have preserved the original wood workings in their 1920s state." A photograph of the skeletal remains of Amundsen's MAUD accompanies the article but, as the text says, little is left above the water. It looks more like a derelict wharf than the remains of a ship. No deadeye souvenirs or much of anything, for that matter, would be available today. Thank you for taking the time to write about the MAUD. We are always receptive to members' input. See below. The Editor "To whom it may concern: It's a historical fact (vouched by Webster's) that the correct spelling is "MURMUR" or "MURMURS" in the plural." To the eagle-eyed watch dog who wrote in to say You must not, no never, spell murmur that way: Tut! Tut! A U and an E where two Us should be? Anonymous reader, you're much righter than me! To the challenge of proof reader, rise up and lay claim. Oh hasten. Innominate. Come MURMER your name! The Editor Our sincere thanks to Kerrisdale Cameras, West Vancouver Branch, for their generous donation (in duplicate!) of the photographic coverage of this year's Community Day parade. Among the many photographs is the accompanying one of an unidentified, boater-hatted driver in a jaunty, but also unidentified, vehicle. The future of the vacant Odeon Theatre seen in the background currently hangs between preservation and re-use or, demolition and redevelopment.