****This is the Project Gutenberg Newsletter for December 10, 1998**** [Usually sent the first Wednesday of each month, delayed if by relay.] Main URL is promo.net Webmaster is Pietro di Miceli, of Rome, Italy If you ever take the time to read this Newsletter beginning to the end . . .this is probably the best time. . .there is a LOT of information, for both those who just want to get our books, and, also for those who want to help create those books. This Newsletter is actually being posted November's first Wednesday in response to the new United States copyright laws passed just last week and is thus doing double duty; as the December 10th Newsletter is more traditionally a venue for releasing some Etexts of the best classics-- which I most often dedicate to my father, who passed away December 10, 9 years ago, just after getting Project Gutenberg's initial supporter, with one of his brilliant ideas that kept amazing me all of my life!!! So. . .here is the biggest Project Gutenberg Newsletter of all time... containing more Etexts than ever before, and, getting us more ahead of schedule than ever before...with more people to contact about becoming a Project Gutenberg volunteer than ever before, and even more. . . . This has been a VERY hectic week, as I came back out of vacation mode, just a week ago today, having posted only about 5 Etexts in 12 days of vacation since our previous Newsletter, and in that one week we posted all 31 Etexts left to complete the next month, as well as the 49 files of our new, and more complete, AND PUBLIC DOMAIN, Shakespeare edition! [During the writing of this Newsletter we have posted three more Etext files for May, 1999, appended at the end of the lists. We also should be posting the newly revised copyrighted Shakespeare files any minute. Sue and Greg may be sending you an independent Newsletter about those. So. . .please forgive me if I have overdone or underdone anything here . . .I am already 7 hours late in getting this posted as we speak. Michael S. Hart Project Gutenberg Executive Director Contents: 0. Late new items. 1. Requests from our volunteers. 2. While "the cat in the Cat in the Hat hat" is away, will mice play? 3. A first glance at the new copyright laws. 4. The 36 Project Gutenberg Etexts for April, 1999. 5. The 49 NEW Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Shakespeare, this one is in the Public Domain, at least in the U.S. 6. The NEWLY REVISED editions of our 100th Etext, the copyrighted version of Shakespeare's works. . .1,000s of errors corrected! 7. Who is this "cat in the Cat in the Hat hat," anyway? Or what? *** 0. Late news items. I [Michael Hart] will be hard to reach for the coming month, as I will be meeting with a number of people, doing conferences, house hunting in Tacoma, and all that stuff, and, hopefully taking rest and refuge from everything to prepare to continue the fight for a reversal of the new copyright laws in court. So, in addition to emailing me at hart@pobox.com, you should also cc: Sue Asscher , or Greg Newby if you can't get to Sue Sue and Greg will be posting the books while I am gone, and maybe even sending out one of these Newsletters! Please also be encouraged to contact: Dianne Bean , United States David Price England John Bickers New Zealand [But don't feel you can only contact the one who is closest to you. . . .] [We don't want Sue and Greg to be too inundated with everything.] They are not nearly as used to this as are Dianne, David and John, and I hope you will be as considerate of them all as possible. Thanks! Michael *** For those who access our sites to get or send Etexts: archive.org has been through a MAJOR crash as is not, at least at this moment, fully recovered, so you may want to try our other sites. Email Sue and Newby to find out where to send files if you have trouble. I note that sunsite.unc.edu is not accepting files for the moment because the disk is full. . .more on this in the Volunteers' Newsletter in a day or so. Newby just this minute let me know that archive.org is up, at least for "outgoing" to send us files, but now it requires a "cd work" command after FTPing in. Newby will try to get the /etext directories running ASAP, so you can get the normal files from archive.org [Right. . ."ootgoing" is now "outgoing" [cd work]!!! 1. As usual, before we even get started, here are requests to find certain books our volunteers would LOVE to work on: The works of Francesca Franco [of "Dangerous Beauty" fame] Tania William Blake, The Four Zoas We have someone who is willing to pay for part of the cost of getting a copy of this. . .and will proofread. You can contact me directly about this one. . . . If the price is decent, just go ahead and get it if the copyright is 1922, or earlier. . .but please don't ship it to me yet. . . . Burton's Arabian Nights. . .for: Ron Burkey Unabridged, dated before 1923 in copyright or publication info. and Would anyone be interested in collecting up pieces of the Human Genome to post on Project Gutenberg? It is often requested. Here is a list of our Directors of Production, please feel free to contact them during the next month as I will be hard to get. ??? *** 2. While "the cat in the Cat in the Hat hat" is away, will mice play? I will be hard to reach for the next month, hobnobbing with my fellow wizards as I tend to do every year at this time. I hope to come back with some major support for Project Gutenberg, as I am aging quickly, and surprised myself quite a bit with our huge rush of production for the past three months. It appears we have posted over 267 new files, with some 216 of them as new editions, all in the past 92 days or so. In fact, the 36 April Etexts, and all the new and revised Shakespeare files were posted in the last two weeks. . .someday I hope we can get that much work done EVERY two weeks! 3. A first glance at the new copyright laws. I was only a week ago that the new copyright laws were signed, and it is my honor to tell you that our volunteers and supporters have great will power when it comes to a call to arms. The HUGE book production over the past two weeks was actually nearly all posted in just 1 week since this new law took effect. [I had already gone into what I call "vacation mode" after sending out the mid-month Newsletter, and, only 4 or 5 new books had been posted between the Newsletter and the law-- when I announce an effort to avenge the passing of the law by posting as many books as possible for the next Newsletter, which would now be set for only one week away, instead of six weeks away. No way I can say NEARLY enough about our volunteers and directors, as they really and truly CAME THROUGH IN A TIME OF CRISIS to let a world know that we were not going to knuckle under to the pressure! A tip of the hat to all of them!! Now, on the legal matters. At first glance, the major effect on the Public Domain is destruction . . .plain and simple. . .for the next 20 years. . .and more, if they pass another such law, which, I am sure they will try their damnedest to do. . .THERE WILL BE NO MORE PUBLIC DOMAIN BOOKS IN THE U.S. other than the ones that had already entered the Public Domain on 1/1/1998. Even if such a law is NOT passed again and again, the Public Domain a person might have gotten used to living in this century will only "be a distant memory before Orwell's Age of 1984" in that a Public Domain that used to include approximately HALF or 50% of all materials of an eternity of publishing up to 100 years ago, should now include nearly 0% of the all the materials that will have been published in history, up to 100 years from now. Let me put this succinctly: 100 years ago the U.S. Public Domain included about 50% of everything 100 years from now the U.S. Public Domain will include about 0%. . Here's the simple math: If copyrighted information doubles every 14 years, and the copyright usually expires in 14 years, then information is flowing into public domain access at the same rate it is flowing into copyright. . .so a quick look tells us that during the time it took to create a world's new supply of information, the old supply of information came out of copyright and into the Public Domain. . . . 100 years ago [and up to 1909] the average copyright lasted about 15 years, with most books having 14 years of copyright monopoly and the copyrights were not renewed, because the books weren't selling after about 5 years, on the average, for the books that were good enough a library would have purchased them. This is still true today. . .you steal or lose a book over 5 years from a library and the odds are it cannot be replaced because it has gone out of print. Since information was doubling just about every 14 years back then-- the result was that half of all information was in the Public Domain . . .which isn't such a terrible way to have it be. . .the powerful, the rich, etc., can still have twice as much as those who mostly use free information. In my interview last week with the New York Times, the interviewer's suggestion was that we consider current information to be doubling a bit faster. . .every 7 years. If the average copyright were still just over 14 years today, we see that 75% or 3/4 of all information would still be copyrighted. The faster information flows through our society, the more is hidden from the Public Domain by copyrights of the same length. Under the new copyright law, the average copyright will be nearly an entire century in length, with no renewals required, and copyrighted notices are no longer required. . .it will be nearly impossible from the average person's point of view, to tell whether anything is in a copyrighted or public domain status, and, it will take some research to find out. . .this alone is enough to stop most public domain use. However, even AFTER doing all the copyright research, the struggling "New Age Public Domain Information Providers" will find that none of the materials they research will be in the Public Domain. . .none in the sense that the number will be closer to 0% than to 1%. . .closer by a HUGE margin to 0% than to 1%. If the New York Times' estimates of 7 years for information doubling may be considered at all correct, then this is what will happen in a United States under the new copyright law, even if we considered 100 percent of current information to the entered into the Public Domain as an incentive to let this law stand: 0 years. . .100% of today's information is in the Public Domain 7 years. . . 50% of today's information is in the Public Domain 14 years. . . 25% of today's information is in the Public Domain 21 years. . . 12.5% of today's information is in the Public Domain 28 years. . . 6.25% of today's information is in the Public Domain 35 years. . . 3.125% of today's information is in the Public Domain 42 years. . . 1.5625% of today's information is in the Public Domain 49 years. . . 0.78125% of today's information is in the Public Domain 56 years. . . 0.390625% of today's information is in the Public Domain 63 years. . . 0.1953125% of today's information is in the Public Domain 70 years. . . 0.09765625% of today's information is in the Public Domain 77 years. . . 0.048828125% of today's information is in the Public Domain 84 years. . . 0.0244140625% of today's information is in the Public Domain 91 years. . . 0.01220703125% of today's information is in the Public Domain 98 years. . . 0.006103515625% of today's information is in the Public Domain This is literally just one book out of some 10,000 books that will be in the Public Domain after about 95 years of a 95 year copyright even if information does NOT continue to increase faster and faster. . . . Many people think information is ALREADY doubling faster than 7 years for each doubling, but all that does is make the total reach 0.00001% etc., etc., etc. And you though Big Brother had a thing for monopolizing information. This is the beginning of The Information Wars Since they can no longer stop us from talking to each other via email or etext or the Web, or FTP, etc., they are passing laws that tell us we cannot include 99.99% of all the information in the world, because it is not all protected by copyright. One last word about the new copyright law. . . . I plan to be in court as soon as possible as a test case to defeat it once and for all. . .wish me luck! 4. The 36 Project Gutenberg Etexts for April, 1999. We have chosen, with great effort and glee, to present what many call the greatest epic of all time as our lead story this month. . .in two separate translations. . .The Odyssey, by Homer. We are also including more Plato and Socrates, O Henry, H. Rider Haggard, and B. M. Bower, as well as several more G. K Chestertons, Balzacs, Conrads, etc. including some of Gaskell's Life of Charlotte Bronte. We also included a bit more Mary Roberts Rinehart and Jules Verne. We hope you enjoy reading these as much as we enjoy bringing them to you. Mon Year Title and Author [filename.ext]#### Correction from last month: Mar 1999 1492, by Mary Johnston [For Columbus Day, 1998] [c1492xxx.xxx]1692 Johnston. . .not Johnson Apr 1999 The Odyssey, by Homer, Butcher & Lang Tr[Homer #3][dyssyxxa.xxx]1728 This is currently dyssy08a.txt and .zip, will be 10a when proofing completed. Apr 1999 The Odyssey, by Homer, Trans by Butler [Homer #2][dyssyxxx.xxx]1727 This is version dyssy10.txt and .zip Also see Collection of Hesiod, Homer and Homerica [homerxxx.xxx] 348 Apr 1999 Theaetetus, by Plato [More of Socrates][Plato #25][thtusxxx.xxx]1726 Apr 1999 Heart of the West, by O Henry [O Henry #5][hrtwsxxx.xxx]1725 Apr 1999 Finished, by H. Rider Haggard[H. Rider Haggard #6][fnshdxxx.xxx]1724 Apr 1999 Cow-Country, by B. M. Bower [B. M. Bower Etext #6][cwcntxxx.xxx]1723 Apr 1999 Martin Luther's Large Catechism, Bente & Dau, Trns[lrgctxxx.xxx]1722 Apr 1999 The Trees of Pride, by Gilbert K. Chesterton [#12][trprdxxx.xxx]1721 Apr 1999 The Man Who Knew Too Much, by G. K. Chesterton #5A[mwktmxxa.xxx]1720 From a different source than our February edition of this. Apr 1999 The Ballad of the White Horse by GK Chesterton #11[botwhxxx.xxx]1719 Apr 1999 Manalive, by G. K. Chesterton[G.K. Chesterton #10][mnalvxxx.xxx]1718 Apr 1999 What's Wrong With The World, by GK Chesterton [#9][wwwtwxxx.xxx]1717 Apr 1999 Copy-Cat & Other Stories by Mary Wilkins Freeman#2[cpyctxxx.xxx]1716 Apr 1999 Eugenie Grandet, by Honore de Balzac [Balzac #63][gngndxxx.xxx]1715 Apr 1999 Another Study of Woman, by Honore de Balzac[dB#62][nswmnxxx.xxx]1714 Apr 1999 Lincoln's Personal Life by Nathaniel W. Stephenson[lsplfxxx.xxx]1713 Apr 1999 The Rescue, by Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad #23][trscuxxx.xxx]1712 Apr 1999 Child of Storm, by H. Rider Haggard [Haggard #5][cstrmxxx.xxx]1711 Apr 1999 La Grande Breteche, by Honore de Balzac[Balzac#61][brtchxxx.xxx]1710 Apr 1999 New Grub Street, by George Gissing [Gissing #2][nwgrbxxx.xxx]1709 John Handford * Apr 1999 A History of Science, V 4, by Henry Smith Williams[4hscixxx.xxx]1708 Apr 1999 A History of Science, V 3, by Henry Smith Williams[3hscixxx.xxx]1707 Apr 1999 A History of Science, V 2, by Henry Smith Williams[2hscixxx.xxx]1706 Apr 1999 A History of Science, V 1, by Henry Smith Williams[1hscixxx.xxx]1705 There is also a V 5, but we haven't done that one yet. . . . Apr 1999 Pierrette, by Honore de Balzac [de Balzac #60][prrttxxx.xxx]1704 Apr 1999 Dead Men Tell No Tales, by E. W. Hornung [EWH #3][dmtntxxx.xxx]1703 Apr 1999 19th Century Actor Autobiographies, by George Iles[aautoxxx.xxx]1702 Apr 1999 Story Of Waitstill Baxter, by Kate D. Wiggin [#10][tsowbxxx.xxx]1701 Apr 1999 Life of Charlotte Bronte, V2, by E. C. Gaskell[#2][2locbxxx.xxx]1700 Apr 1999 The Vanished Messenger by E. Phillips Oppenheim #4[vmsgrxxx.xxx]1699 Apr 1999 The Survivors of the Chancellor, by Jules Verne #8[tsotcxxa.xxx]1698 This is from a different source than our previous edition. Apr 1999 Madam How and Lady Why, by Charles Kingsley[CK #7][hwwhyxxx.xxx]1697 Apr 1999 The Club of Queer Trades, by G. K. Chesterton/GKC8[tcoqtxxx.xxx]1696 Apr 1999 The Man Who Was Thursday, by G. K. Chesterton/GKC7[tmwhtxxx.xxx]1695 Apr 1999 Our Legal Heritage, by S. A. Reilly [rlglhxxx.xxx]1694 Apr 1999 Dangerous Days, by Mary Roberts Rinehart [MRR #8] [ddaysxxx.xxx]1693 5. The 49 NEW Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Shakespeare, this one is in the Public Domain, at least in the U.S. Remember: these are in /etext98, we reserved the slots for them before we got on the HUGE production run that doubled the Etexts coming out over the past three months. . .during this period our volunteers have created about 266 Etext files for you to read. The revised versions of our OLD Shakespeare are done and will be announced. . .I just don't have the filenames for them. . .since we didn't release them as separate files back in 1994, we cannot just put them in /etext94 as updates to old filenames. This may mean they will have to appear as June and July, 1999 Etexts; the April Etexts are all done, and we may have already started May. Nov 1998 Locrine/Mucedorus, Shakespeare Apocrypha [1ws48xxx.xxx]1548 Nov 1998 Sir Thomas More, Shakespeare Apocrypha [1ws47xxx.xxx]1547 Nov 1998 Sonnets/Sundry Notes of Music, William Shakespeare[1ws46xxx.xxx]1546 Nov 1998 The Passionate Pilgrim, by William Shakespeare [3ws45xxx.xxx]1545 Nov 1998 The Passionate Pilgrim, by William Shakespeare [2ws45xxx.xxx]1544 Nov 1998 A Lover's Complaint, by William Shakespeare [2ws44xxx.xxx]1543 Nov 1998 The Two Noble Kinsmen, Shakespeare Apocrypha [2ws43xxx.xxx]1542 Nov 1998 King Henry VIII, by William Shakespeare [2ws43xxx.xxx]1541 Nov 1998 The Tempest, by William Shakespeare [2ws41xxx.xxx]1540 Nov 1998 The Winter's Tale, by William Shakespeare [2ws40xxx.xxx]1539 Nov 1998 Cymbeline, by William Shakespeare [2ws39xxx.xxx]1538 Nov 1998 Pericles, by William Shakespeare [2ws38xxx.xxx]1537 Nov 1998 Timon of Athens, by William Shakespeare [2ws37xxx.xxx]1536 Nov 1998 Coriolanus, by William Shakespeare [2ws36xxx.xxx]1535 Nov 1998 Antony and Cleopatra, by William Shakespeare [2ws35xxx.xxx]1534 Nov 1998 Macbeth, by William Shakespeare [2ws34xxx.xxx]1533 Nov 1998 King Lear, by William Shakespeare [2ws33xxx.xxx]1532 Nov 1998 Othello, by Shakespeare [2ws32xxx.xxx]1531 Nov 1998 Measure for Measure, by William Shakespeare [2ws31xxx.xxx]1530 Nov 1998 All's Well That Ends Well, by William Shakespeare [2ws30xxx.xxx]1529 Nov 1998 Troilus and Cressida, by William Shakespeare [2ws29xxx.xxx]1528 Nov 1998 Twelfth Night, by William Shakespeare [3ws28xxx.xxx]1527 Nov 1998 Twelfth Night, by William Shakespeare [2ws28xxx.xxx]1526 Nov 1998 The Phoenix and the Turtle, by William Shakespeare[2ws27xxx.xxx]1525 Nov 1998 Hamlet, by William Shakespeare [2ws26xxx.xxx]1524 Nov 1998 As You Like It, by William Shakespeare [2ws25xxx.xxx]1523 Nov 1998 Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare [2ws24xxx.xxx]1522 Nov 1998 King Henry V, by William Shakespeare [2ws23xxx.xxx]1521 Nov 1998 Much Ado About Nothing, by William Shakespeare [3ws22xxx.xxx]1520 Nov 1998 Much Ado About Nothing, by William Shakespeare [2ws22xxx.xxx]1519 Nov 1998 King Henry IV, Part 2, by William Shakespeare [2ws21xxx.xxx]1518 Nov 1998 The Merry Wives of Windsor, by William Shakespeare[2ws20xxx.xxx]1517 Nov 1998 King Henry IV, Part 1, by William Shakespeare [2ws19xxx.xxx]1516 Nov 1998 The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare [2ws18xxx.xxx]1515 Nov 1998 A Midsummer Night's Dream, by William Shakespeare [2ws17xxx.xxx]1514 Nov 1998 Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare [2ws16xxx.xxx]1513 Oct 1998 King Richard II, by William Shakespeare [2ws15xxx.xxx]1512 Oct 1998 King John, by William Shakespeare [2ws14xxx.xxx]1511 Oct 1998 Love's Labour's Lost, by William Shakespeare [2ws12xxx.xxx]1510 Oct 1998 Two Gentlemen of Verona, by William Shakespeare [2ws11xxx.xxx]1509 Oct 1998 The Taming of the Shrew, by William Shakespeare [2ws10xxx.xxx]1508 Oct 1998 The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus, by Wm Shakespeare[2ws09xxx.xxx]1507 Oct 1998 The Rape of Lucrece, by William Shakespeare [3ws08xxx.xxx]1506 Oct 1998 The Rape of Lucrece, by William Shakespeare [2ws08xxx.xxx]1505 Oct 1998 The Comedy of Errors, by William Shakespeare [2ws06xxx.xxx]1504 Oct 1998 King Richard III, by William Shakespeare [2ws04xxx.xxx]1503 Oct 1998 King Henry VI, Part 3, by William Shakespeare [2ws03xxx.xxx]1502 Oct 1998 King Henry VI, Part 2, by William Shakespeare [2ws02xxx.xxx]1501 Oct 1998 King Henry VI, Part 1, by William Shakespeare [2ws01xxx.xxx]1500 6. The NEWLY REVISED editions of our 100th Etext, the copyrighted version of Shakespeare's works. . .1,000s of errors corrected! These will likely be in /etext99, stay tuned for Newsletters from Sue and Greg about these. The filenames will be same as above only instead of starting with a 2 or 3, they will start with 1, and the revision number is 11: so 2ws0110.txt and .zip are the NEW Public Domain edition of Henry as listed above in /etect98 and 1ws0111.txt and .zip will be the revised [11] old copyrighted edition in /etext94 and the new files will be in /etext99 If you have any problems finding these on your own, you can ask Sue Asscher, listed above, how to find them. If you are using an index, don't forget that it takes our indexers quite a while to get this many etext indexed, so you might want learn how to use FTP, or the FTP functions in your browers, to get them now. Remember: if you get these files directly, without a "point and click" you will need to go to three different directories: April will be in /etext99 The NEW Shakespeare will be in /etext98 The revised versions from Etext #100 will be in /etext99 The original version of Etext #100 is still in /etext94 Etext #100 was originally released on December 10, 1993, for an official release date of January, 1994. Hard to believe we have posted 1628 Etexts since then, an average of nearly one Etext per day. [Literally ~.9] 7. Who is "the cat in the Cat in the Hat hat," anyway? Or what? I am pictured as the 2nd in the list of the Wired 25 for 1998 and since I don't like having my picture taken, I tend to clown a bit for the camera to make it more exciting. . .so I am sitting in my chair in the middle of a country road through the cornfields with a "long-stemmed American Beauty" between my teeth. . .well you'll understand when/if you see the picture. . .and I'm wearing my own trademark red t-shirt with a "Cat in the Hat" hat. . . . OK, let's make it brief, I often either break into a sweat or may seem too self-important when these things come up. . . . First. . .please let me remind you that I probably do less than 1 percent of the work it takes to do Project Gutenberg; maybe less, when I consider how many Project Gutenberg sites there are that I don't even know about, and probably never will. I accept any awards to Project Gutenberg, or myself, on behalf of all of our volunteers, past, present and future and I forward all the "Thank You Notes" I get, whether via email or snailmail on to the entire list of volunteers on our listserver. I tried to get WIRED to give this award to Project Gutenberg as a whole: and you probably don't want to hear the whole story about that. . . . To make a long story short Wired finally seems to have bought the tickets to send me to the award banquet to receive "The WIRED 25" award, for which they commisioned a world famous architect, and I also get a pair of tennis shoes, a hotel room, and a limo, to and from LAX. . .I promise to enjoy it all as much as possible in the honor of all our volunteers. "THOSE WHO DARE THE WIRED 25 A SALUTE TO: DREAMERS, INVENTORS, MAVERICKS, LEADERS" "Life is short. "Especially when you're determined to break all the rules." If you want to read the rest, I suppose I should encourage you to go out and buy the November issue of Wired. . .it says THE WIRED 25 right in the middle of the cover, can't miss it. The first half of my name is obscured by the 25. . . . IT'S OFFICIAL: NEW NAME FOR NT 5.0. The next-gen OS becomes "Windows 2000." They are trying to get it out before 2000. Nov 1998 Locrine/Mucedorus, Shakespeare Apocrypha [1ws48xxx.xxx]1548 Nov 1998 Sir Thomas More, Shakespeare Apocrypha [1ws47xxx.xxx]1547 Nov 1998 Sonnets/Sundry Notes of Music, William Shakespeare[1ws46xxx.xxx]1546 Nov 1998 The Passionate Pilgrim, by William Shakespeare [3ws45xxx.xxx]1545 Nov 1998 The Passionate Pilgrim, by William Shakespeare [2ws45xxx.xxx]1544 Nov 1998 A Lover's Complaint, by William Shakespeare [2ws44xxx.xxx]1543 Nov 1998 The Two Noble Kinsmen, Shakespeare Apocrypha [2ws43xxx.xxx]1542 Nov 1998 King Henry VIII, by William Shakespeare [2ws43xxx.xxx]1541 Nov 1998 The Tempest, by William Shakespeare [2ws41xxx.xxx]1540 Nov 1998 The Winter's Tale, by William Shakespeare [2ws40xxx.xxx]1539 Nov 1998 Cymbeline, by William Shakespeare [2ws39xxx.xxx]1538 Nov 1998 Pericles, by William Shakespeare [2ws38xxx.xxx]1537 Nov 1998 Timon of Athens, by William Shakespeare [2ws37xxx.xxx]1536 Nov 1998 Coriolanus, by William Shakespeare [2ws36xxx.xxx]1535 Nov 1998 Antony and Cleopatra, by William Shakespeare [2ws35xxx.xxx]1534 Nov 1998 Macbeth, by William Shakespeare [2ws34xxx.xxx]1533 Nov 1998 King Lear, by William Shakespeare [2ws33xxx.xxx]1532 Nov 1998 Othello, by Shakespeare [2ws32xxx.xxx]1531 Nov 1998 Measure for Measure, by William Shakespeare [2ws31xxx.xxx]1530 Nov 1998 All's Well That Ends Well, by William Shakespeare [2ws30xxx.xxx]1529 Nov 1998 Troilus and Cressida, by William Shakespeare [2ws29xxx.xxx]1528 Nov 1998 Twelfth Night, by William Shakespeare [3ws28xxx.xxx]1527 Nov 1998 Twelfth Night, by William Shakespeare [2ws28xxx.xxx]1526 Nov 1998 The Phoenix and the Turtle, by William Shakespeare[2ws27xxx.xxx]1525 Nov 1998 Hamlet, by William Shakespeare [2ws26xxx.xxx]1524 Nov 1998 As You Like It, by William Shakespeare [2ws25xxx.xxx]1523 Nov 1998 Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare [2ws24xxx.xxx]1522 Nov 1998 King Henry V, by William Shakespeare [2ws23xxx.xxx]1521 Nov 1998 Much Ado About Nothing, by William Shakespeare [3ws22xxx.xxx]1520 Nov 1998 Much Ado About Nothing, by William Shakespeare [2ws22xxx.xxx]1519 Nov 1998 King Henry IV, Part 2, by William Shakespeare [2ws21xxx.xxx]1518 Nov 1998 The Merry Wives of Windsor, by William Shakespeare[2ws20xxx.xxx]1517 Nov 1998 King Henry IV, Part 1, by William Shakespeare [2ws19xxx.xxx]1516 Nov 1998 The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare [2ws18xxx.xxx]1515 Nov 1998 A Midsummer Night's Dream, by William Shakespeare [2ws17xxx.xxx]1514 Nov 1998 Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare [2ws16xxx.xxx]1513 Oct 1998 King Richard II, by William Shakespeare [2ws15xxx.xxx]1512 Oct 1998 King John, by William Shakespeare [2ws14xxx.xxx]1511 Oct 1998 Love's Labour's Lost, by William Shakespeare [2ws12xxx.xxx]1510 Oct 1998 Two Gentlemen of Verona, by William Shakespeare [2ws11xxx.xxx]1509 Oct 1998 The Taming of the Shrew, by William Shakespeare [2ws10xxx.xxx]1508 Oct 1998 The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus, by Wm Shakespeare[2ws09xxx.xxx]1507 Oct 1998 The Rape of Lucrece, by William Shakespeare [3ws08xxx.xxx]1506 Oct 1998 The Rape of Lucrece, by William Shakespeare [2ws08xxx.xxx]1505 Oct 1998 The Comedy of Errors, by William Shakespeare [2ws06xxx.xxx]1504 Oct 1998 King Richard III, by William Shakespeare [2ws04xxx.xxx]1503 Oct 1998 King Henry VI, Part 3, by William Shakespeare [2ws03xxx.xxx]1502 Oct 1998 King Henry VI, Part 2, by William Shakespeare [2ws02xxx.xxx]1501 Oct 1998 King Henry VI, Part 1, by William Shakespeare [2ws01xxx.xxx]1500 MICROSOFT SAYS IT WAS NETSCAPE THAT SUGGESTED A DEAL In the antitrust suit against Microsoft, Microsoft has introduced a December 1994 e-mail message from Netscape chairman James Clark as evidence that it was Netscape rather than Microsoft that first suggested an arrangement to illegally restrain trade. Clark had written to a Microsoft executive: "We have never planned to compete with you. We want to make this company a success, but not at Microsoft's expense. We'd like to work with you. Working together could be in your self-interest as well as ours. Depending on the interest level, you might take an equity position in Netscape, with the ability to expand the position later." He added: "No one in my organization knows about this message." A Microsoft attorney yesterday asked Netscape president James Barksdale of Netscape chairman and cofounder James Clark: "Do you regard him as a truthful man?" Barksdale paused and then replied: "I regard him as a salesman." The Microsoft attorney said: "I'm not going to touch that." (New York Times 22 Oct 98) ANOTHER TRY AT FREE NET SERVICE NetZero Inc. is offering free Internet service to consumers, operating on an advertising-based business model. The company isn't selling your typical banner ad, however. NetZero's banners can "follow" users from site to site as they peruse the Web. The company says it's spent a year developing software that tracks users' habits, enabling advertisers to pinpoint their messages more efficiently. "We can target within a 12-mile radius of where (a subscriber) lives," says NetZero's CEO. Idealab Capital Partners, which is backing the venture, thinks subscribers will like the free access despite the ads. "People are spending $21.95 a month for AOL -- that's a lot of money," says Idealab's managing director. "We offer a value proposition that's hard to beat." (Investor's Business Daily 19 Oct 98) "GRASSROOTS" LOBBY EFFORT ROOTED AT AT&T The Prince George's Coalition Against Hidden Taxes, supposedly a grassroots lobbying effort organized in Maryland, has been revealed to be a massive effort by AT&T to defeat proposed legislation that would charge a fee of 3% of gross revenues generated by telecom companies seeking to use public rights of way to lay cable, string wire, or plant cellular towers to provide new services. AT&T considers the legislation unfair because it singles out telecommunications companies from other users of public land, such as sanitary commissions and gas & electric companies. Calling the Coalition's media campaign a "massive fraud," the Prince George's County chief executive said, "This isn't any citizens coalition. This is a bunch of giant companies trying to profit off the public for free." (Washington Post 24 Oct 98) E-BOOKS TO COME SINGING DOWN THE WIRE Saying that "if you can get to the Web, you can buy a book -- instantly," the chief executive of NuvoMedia unveiled his company's paperback-size, 22-ounce $499 electronic Rocket eBook at Barnes & Noble, the bookstore and publishing company that will make titles available for downloading onto a personal computer. Books will sell for $18 to $25, and downloading of a book will take 2 to 5 minutes. Tapping a button will allow the reader to scroll through the book, which will include a built-in dictionary and allow electronic underlining, note-taking, word search, and font changes. Generally similar products are being developed by other manufacturers, including SoftBook Press and Everybook Inc. (AP 23 Oct 98) Edupage ... is what you've just finished reading excerpts of-- to subscribe to Edupage: send mail to: listproc@educom.unc.edu with the message: subscribe edupage Susan B. Anthony (if your name is Susan B. 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