Station
Similar stations in T'u Tu
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Party of YoruClark Depot
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Party of YoruCooperative Linguistic Innovations
Installation (Scientific) - -
Party of YoruCrown Corps Encampment
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Donaldson's Inheritance
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Allied T'U Tu FocusGrothendieck Penal colony
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Party of YoruJenkins Laboratory
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
T'u Tu Citizens' ForumLee Enterprise
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Mason Depot
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Party of YoruPlait Survey
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Party of YoruSilver Mesa Hospital
Installation (Medical) - -
Party of YoruStonehill Point
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Thomson Terminal
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Party of Yoruvan Vogt Landing
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Party of YoruWomack Observatory
Surface Settlement (Installation) - 32 Ls
T'u Tu Citizens' Forum
Galpedia
Reginald Bretnor
Reginald Bretnor (born Alfred Reginald Kahn; July 30, 1911 – July 22, 1992) was a science fiction author who flourished between the 1950s and 1980s. Most of his fiction was in short story form, and usually featured a whimsical story line or ironic plot twist. He also wrote on military theory and public affairs, and edited some of the earliest books to consider SF from a literary theory and criticism perspective.
Bretnor’s father, Grigory Kahn, was born in Russia, but he and his family left Siberia for Japan in 1917 and later settled in the United States. Bretnor’s mother was born a British subject, became a Russian subject, spent from 1917 to 1920 in Japan, then settled in the United States with her children Reginald and Margaret. Reginald Bretnor himself was born in Vladivostok, Russia. He was married to Helen Harding, a translator and U.C. Berkeley librarian, from 1948 until her death in 1967. He subsequently married Rosalie, whom he referred to in a letter in the Southern Oregon Historical Society Archives as Rosalie McShane, although she wrote under the name Rosalie Bodrero.
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