4: Tentative tangling of tendrils
7: Illustrious hoenikkers
8: Newt's thing with Zinka
9: Vice-president in charge of volcanoes
12: End of the world delight
14: When automobiles had cut-glass vases
18: Most valuable commodity on earth
22: Member of the yellow press
23: Last batch of brownies
25: Main thing about Dr Hoenikker
29: Gone, but not forgotten
38: Barracuda capital of the world
40: House of hope and mercy
42: Bicycles for Afghanistan
44: Communist sympathizers
45: Why Americans are hated
46: Bokononist method for handling Caesar
48: Just like Saint Augustine
49: Fish pitched up by an angry sea
53: President of Fabri-Tek
54: Communist, Nazis, Royalists, parachutists, and draft dodgers
55: Never index your own book
56: Self-supporting squirrel cage
58: Tyranny with a difference
59: Fasten your seat belts
60: Underprivileged nation
61: What a corporal was worth
62: Why Hazel wasn't scared
65: Good time to come to San Lorenzo
66: Strongest thing there is
71: Happiness of being an American
75: Give my regards to Albert Schweitzer
76: Julian Castle agrees with Newt that everything is meaningless
77: Aspirin and Boko-Maru
79: Why McCabe's soul grew coarse
81: White bride for the son of a Pullman porter
83: Dr Schlichter von Koenigswald approaches the break-even point
88: Why Frank couldn't be president
92: On the poet's celebration of his first Boko-Maru
93: How I almost lost my Mona
96: Bell, book, and chicken in a hatbox
100: Down the oubliette goes Frank.
101: Like my predecessors, I outlaw Bokonon
103: Medical opinion on the effects of a writers' strike
106: What Bokononists say when they commit suicide
108: Frank tells us what to do
109: Frank defends himself
112: Newt's mother's reticule
114: When I felt the bullet enter my heart
118: Iron maiden and the oubliette
120: To whom it may concern
122: Swiss family Robinson