3spheres.pcx
============
One of my favorite prints by the Dutch artist M.C. Escher. I
captured this and several other Escher prints from the web.
The site I got it from seems to have gone away, but I'm sure
you can find other sites if you search with Yahoo ...
http://search.yahoo.com/bin/search/options

amstel.pcx
==========
"View over Amstel" (ca.1646) by Rembrandt van Ryn (1606-1669).
National Gallery of Art, Washington. This is an image I scanned
from a print. I chose it because the image was already almost
perfectly proportioned for the palmtop screen. The light sky 
provides an area where text can be added.

babylon5.pcx
============
A side view of the Babylon 5 space station from the TV show of
the same name. This image was downloaded from the anonymous ftp
site ftp.midwinter.com, in the directory /pub/Babylon-5. On the
web it's known as "The Lurker's Guide":
http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/lurker.html

bayeux23.pcx
============
A small section of the Bayeux Tapestry. You can find the
entire length of the Tapestry on the web at ...
http://blah.bsuvc.bsu.edu/bt

cassini.pcx
===========
An artist's depiction of the Cassini spacecraft during its
SOI (Saturn Orbit Insertion) maneuver. From the web at ...
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/cassini/Images/slides/slide7.html

celtcats.pcx
============
Scanned from the cover of a wonderful little book by Kathryn
Lynne Darnell, "Celtic Cats: A Small Book of Nine Lives."
Ms. Darnell says, "the cat is a common & most lively character
in embellishment of the Book of Kells." The scanned image does
not come close to doing justice to Ms. Darnell's fine calli-
graphy, but it caught my fancy anyway.

cygnus.pcx
==========
A portion of a star map from the sky atlas "Uranographia" by 
Johann Hevelius. This is from a marvelous Italian web site 
which has the entire collection of maps from Uranographia ...
http://albinoni.brera.unimi.it/HEAVENS/ATLAS/hevelius.html

dewdrop.pcx
===========
Another print by M.C. Escher from the web.

discovry.pcx
============
The spaceship Discovery from the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey. 
There are several good web sites devoted to this classic 
movie. You could do worse than to start at ...
http://www.underview.com/30years.html

earth.pcx
=========
A cloud-free photomosaic of the earth, from satellite imagery.
I caught this image when it was posted on a Usenet newsgroup
(one of the sci.space.* groups, I think). The Pacific Ocean
provides a good area for text.

erthrise.pcx
============
A view of Earth rising above the lunar horizon, taken from a
Apollo mission. This and other space images were found at
some of the hundreds of space-oriented sites on the web. 
Perhaps the best place to start looking for such images is 
NASA's own "Space Hotlist" at ...
http://www.osf.hq.nasa.gov/interest.html

light.pcx
=========
The Portland Head light, at Cape Elizabeth, Maine. I scanned
this from a postcard. 

mccall.pcx
==========
The famous "wheel" space station from the movie 2001: A Space
Odyssey. This image is a portion of one of the promotional
painting commissioned from the great space artist Robert
McCall.

mirearth.pcx
============
A photograph of the Russian "Mir" (Peace) space station, as
seen from the space shuttle.

moebius.pcx
===========
Yet another print by M.C. Escher.

tarsier.pcx
===========
The tarsier is a nocturnal mammal related to the lemur. I
scanned this image from the cover of the book, "Learning
the vi Editor," published by O'Reilly and Associates. You
can fetch images of many O'Reilly book covers at ...
ftp://ftp.oreilly.com/pub/graphics/book_covers/
By the way, all of the animals on O'Reilly book covers are
from the copyright-free Dover Pictorial archives.

ukiyo-e.pcx
===========
A snow-covered Japanese landscape, from an Ukiyo-e print. This
image is greatly cropped from the original image I downloaded
from the anonymous ftp site ftp.uwtc.washington.edu, in the
directory pub/Japanese/Pictures/Ukiyo-e. On the web, a good
starting place to search for Ukiyo-e images is ...
http://www.bahnhof.se/~secutor/ukiyo-e/

vnusmars.txt
============
"Venus and Mars" (ca.1485) by Sandro Botticelli (1444-1510).
National Gallery, London. Scanned from a book. Almost perfectly
proportioned for the HP-100/200 screen, though I doubt that
Botticelli planned it that way.

yinyang.pcx
===========
I found this image on the web when I was looking for a site
with information about T'ai Chi.