218 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
218 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
From archive@vax.oxford.ac.uk Sun Oct 31 14:22:35 EST 1993
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Article: 235 of alt.etext
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Path: news.itd.umich.edu!destroyer!gumby!yale!yale.edu!newsserver.jvnc.net!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!uknet!comlab.ox.ac.uk!oxuniv!archive
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From: archive@vax.oxford.ac.uk (Oxford Text Archive)
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Newsgroups: alt.etext
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Subject: Re: FTP Oxford Text Archives
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Message-ID: <1993Oct29.144816.17690@vax.oxford.ac.uk>
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Date: 29 Oct 93 14:48:16 GMT
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References: <citiznkCFK61p.A1p@netcom.com>
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Organization: Oxford University VAX 6620
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Lines: 203
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In article <citiznkCFK61p.A1p@netcom.com>, citiznk@netcom.com (Outta Control Data) writes:
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> I've seen an e-mail address for Oxford Text Archives (OTA), but
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> is there an OTA site accessible to telnet or FTP and, if so, what's
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> needed to log on?
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This might help!
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Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 7, No. 0107. Tuesday, 17 Aug 1993.
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Date: Thu, 29 Jul 1993 10:43:15 +0100
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From: Oxford Text Archive <archive@vax.ox.ac.uk>
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*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
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THE OXFORD TEXT ARCHIVE IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE...
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*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
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* a new Short List of titles held at Oxford
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* 40 titles now available in TEI format for anonymous FTP
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* a new FTP service for licensed access via the Internet
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It's been a long time since we posted any news of our activities to
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this or other lists. It's not that we've been inactive -- quite the
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opposite in fact.
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* We have been converting texts to a standard TEI-compatible mark up
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(with much appreciated help from Jeffrey Triggs at Bellcore, and
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John Price-Wilkin at Virginia).
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* We have been experimenting with ways of saving time and money by
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using FTP, Gopher, WWW etc to deliver material rather than tapes and
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disks
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* We have been scouring the networks for new material of all kinds
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* We have been trying to find some additional and reliable sources of
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funding, but cannot report much progress. Any philanthropists out
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there, please form an orderly queue.
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***** NEW ACCESSIONS ******
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Our latest catalogue lists 1336 titles, in 28 languages. We have
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about 1.2 Gb of textual data, most of it freely available, some of it
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restricted in one way or another. We want more. We're particularly
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interested in scholarly minority-interest material which is not going
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to turn up on CD-anything in the foreseeable future. We don't charge
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fees to look after your material, and we keep track of what happens to
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it. We do our best to make sure that whatever texts you deposit with us
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are rendered as future-proof as we can make them but we don't change
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the information you recorded. We're archivists, not evangelists, for
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electronic text.
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At the same time, now that some kind of standardization is at last
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beginning to appear, we're eager to show that old wine can be put into
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new bottles. So you'll find that quite a few texts are now available in
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more than one form -- both the original, and a "TEI-compatible" form.
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(When the original form is easily available elsewhere, and particularly
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when the TEI form has more information in it, then we may well drop the
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former from the catalogue. But don't worry: it's still in the
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Archive....)
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*********** NEW FTP SERVICES *************
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Our ftp address is: ota.ox.ac.uk. You can log on as anonymous,
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quoting your e-mail address as a password.
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If you don't know how to use FTP, ask someone at your local computer
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centre. If someone there runs a Gopher, or WWW server, get them to
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point the little critter at the following useful files, which you
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can also download from the above address:
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ota/textarchive.list our current catalogue
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ota/textarchive.info information file + order form
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There are two classes of texts available from this FTP server
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(a) texts which are in TEI format and which we can make freely
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available (these all appear as category P texts in the shortlist)
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(b) texts which are available only under our standard conditions of
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use, (these all appear as category U or A in the shortlist)
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[Just to confuse the issue, there are also texts which appear as
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category P texts in the Shortlist, because they are freely available,
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but which we have not yet checked or converted for TEI compatibility,
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and which are therefore not available from our FTP server, though you
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may well be able to get them from someone else's. We will distribute
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them in the same way as (b) class texts if you insist.]
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A CLASS TEXTS (Freely Available)
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You can just download these without formality using standard FTP
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commands. In some cases there are additional usage constraints,
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specified in the TEI header. We also hope that you won't redistribute
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these texts in a mutilated state or without acknowledgment of where you
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got them from. We can't enforce any of these things, obviously. We
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think that the Internet is successful because -- and as long as --
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people trust each other.
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To see what (a) class texts are available now, just take a look in the
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directory ota. It's arranged, like the ShortList, by language, and
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within that by Author. There are x texts in there today, and there will
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be more. Each text has a conformant TEI header, and each text is a
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legal TEI compatible document, using a special document type definition
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(dtd), which you can also download from the same directory (look in
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ota/TEI). Eventually, there'll be some more introductory stuff on what
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SGML is, why the TEI is a Good Thing etc etc. Just now, we're working
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flat out getting the texts in there.
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Here's the list of what was there when I prepared this note:
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Anonymous: Gammer Gurtons Needle
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Edgar Rice Burroughs: A Princess of Mars
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Wilkie Collins: The Woman in White
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Joseph Conrad: Lord Jim; Nigger of the Narcissus
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Charles Darwin: Origin of Species
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Arthur Conan Doyle: Adventures of Sherlock Holmes; Casebook of Sherlock
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Holmes; His last bow; Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes; Sign of Four; Valley
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of Fear; Hound of the Baskervilles; Return of Sherlock Holmes; A study
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in Scarlet
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Henry James: The Europeans; Roderick Hudson; The Watch
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Jack London: Klondike Tales; The Seawolf; The Call of the Wild; Whitefang
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Andrew Marvell: English Poems (1688)
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Herman Melville: Moby Dick
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John Milton: Paradise Lost
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Lucy M. Montgomery: Ann of Avonlea
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William Morris: News from Nowhere
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Baroness Orczy: The Scarlet Pimpernel
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Bram Stoker: Dracula
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Antony Trollope: Lady Anna; Ayalas Angel; The Eustace Diamonds; Can you
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forgive her; Phineas Finn; Phineas Redux; Rachel Ray; Dr Wortle's School;
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Mark Twain: A Connecticut Yankee at the court of King Arthur
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H.G. Wells: The Invisible Man; The War of the Worlds; The Time Machine
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(B) CLASS TEXTS : (Restricted access)
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The majority of texts in the Archive are and always have been held in
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trust for a Depositor. Rather than keep track of a zillion different
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contracts with each Depositor, we worked out a single contract which is
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the basis of our standard user declaration form. It has served to keep
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us out of the law courts for the last twenty five years, so it can't
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have been all bad.
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Because it's a contract, we have to have a signed paper copy of the
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declaration in our hands before we can issue copies of the texts. Once
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we have that declaration, we can send you copies of restricted texts, on
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diskette, cartridge or magnetic tape, or even over the network.
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Up till this week, the only way you could get copies of (b) class texts
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over the network was to tell us an account and password on your
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machine. We would then bash the files across to you, for free. This was
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a rather unsatisfactory procedure in several ways: we think we now have
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a better one. It's still free and it works like this:
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- you send us a signed order form, as usual
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- on the order form you specify the password of your choice
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- we place copies of the files you ordered in a special directory under ota,
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access to which requires you to quote both a personal identifier (which we
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will give you) and the password (which you have told us)
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- we send you e-mail giving details of how to access the directory
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- you download copies of the files you ordered, using conventional ftp
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commands
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- after a fixed period of time (usually about a week) your personal
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identifier is removed and the file copies deleted
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**********THE DOWN SIDE************
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We save until the very end of this note the inevitable piece of bad
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news. After 25 years, we've been told very firmly that we have to
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increase our prices to something a bit nearer a realistic level. Not
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only that, but within the European Community we must charge VAT at 17.5%
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on every order. We've taken this opportunity to rethink the way in which
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we charge slightly.
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We charge only for material costs, postage and packing on orders for
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texts sent on magnetic media of various kinds. We have abolished the
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"per text" fee, and we are no longer insisting on payment in advance.
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We are still charging over the odds for diskettes because they take us a
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disproportionate amount of effort to produce.
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The cost is worked out as follows:
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Magnetic tape: #50 ($80) each
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DC350 tape cartridge #30 ($50) each
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Diskette #20 ($35) each
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Invoicing charge #10 ($20) payable if order is not prepaid
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Postage surcharge #10 ($20) for orders outside EC
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Add VAT at 17.5% for orders within EC
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We will continue to give an estimate for the cost of any order free of
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charge. And, of course, if you use our new FTP service, then you don't
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need to pay us a penny.
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We look forward to hearing from you in the new academic year!
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Lou Burnard and Alan Morrison
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*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
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Oxford Text Archive email: archive@ox.ac.uk
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Oxford University Computing Services tel: +44 865 273238
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13 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 6NN, UK fax: +44 865 273275
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*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
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