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Canadian writer Kay Hill, 93, in March ("And Tomorrow the Stars," 1969)

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Lenona

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Jun 15, 2011, 1:26:20 PM6/15/11
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Aka Kathleen Louise Hill, she lived in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

I can't seem to find an obit. Here's what I did find:

http://obits.dignitymemorial.com/dignity-memorial/obituary-print.aspx?n=Kathleen-Hill&lc=3004&pid=149360799&mid=4596165

WRITINGS

Under name Kay Hill:

* Glooscap and His Magic: Legends of the Wabanaki Indians, Dodd,
1963.
* Badger, the Mischief Maker, Dodd, 1965.
* And Tomorrow the Stars: The Story of John Cabot, Dodd, 1968.
* More Glooscap Stories: Legends of the Wabanaki Indians, Dodd,
1970.
* Joe Howe: The Man Who Was Nova Scotia, McClelland & Stewart,
1980.

Plays:

* Three to Get Married (three-act comedy), Samuel French, 1964.
* Cobbler: Stick to Thy Last (one-act play; produced in Ottawa,
Canada at the National Arts Centre, July 5, 1969), Dramatic
Publishing, 1967.
* "The Lady in Black" (television play), 1969.

"Work represented in numerous anthologies, including: Beyond the
Footlights, edited by Hugh Duncan McKellar, Macmillan, 1963;
Encounter, Methuen, 1973; Transitions II, Methuen, 1978. Children's
stories and plays have also been represented in numerous anthologies.
Also author of series of thirteen television dramas, "Byng's
Boarders," 1956, and of series of twenty-six television dramas,
"Indian Legends." Also author of numerous radio and television plays.
Contributor of articles, short stories, serials, and documentaries for
numerous periodicals."

"Best Juvenile Book in Canada" award, Canadian Library Association,
1969, for And Tommorrow the Stars; Nickey Metcalfe Award, 1971.


Lenona.

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