Alan: Here are the materials you requested for your presentation to NSERC: 1a) The first OH following is a (sketchy) system presentation, showing the basic elements of the Polar Camera. 1b) The second OH is a photo of the Polar Camera installed at the ASTRO Laboratory at Eureka. 2) The third OH is a figure from Steele & Cogger, Polar patches and the "tongue of ionization", Radio Science, 31, 667-677, 1996. I am including a reprint for your retention if you wish. 3a) The fourth page is an excerpt from the text of the Geospace Optical Research poster, which provides a superabundance of phrases. In include it in case it is useful in its present form. 3b) In case it isn't, here are representative phrases: - Dual all-sky imagers with filter-wheel spectral selection and low-noise CCD detectors, rugged enough for monitoring through Arctic winter night; - Simultaneous 60-s exposures at two wavelengths provide high sensitivity to faint upper-atmospheric optical emissions; - Emissions monitored include OH 6-2 R and Q branches (airglow), [OI] red and green lines (airglow/aurora), N2+ Meinel (2,0) band and N2 1 Pos (5,2) band (aurora) and backgrounds at 608 and 820 nm; - Topics studied include convecting F-region ionization patches, polar auroral arcs and diffuse emissions, and wave spectra at the mesopause.