\centerline{\bf Copyright} \medskip \noindent One very recent \hax\ message concerned the issue of copyright. This struck a chord with me, since I recently obtained Pat Monardo's C-\TeX\ (referred to here as CommonTeX), which contains a rider about copyright. The message was from Ozan Yigit (as Sebastian Rahtz said, the names are often unusual to British ears). Granted that all this is about US copyright law, I'm sure it still does have relevance to the future of `\TeX-in-C' at the least. I have abbreviated it only very slightly. He (or she) writes: {\narrower \noindent ``I have been following, with great interest, the recent chatter surrounding the C implementation (Ctex) of \TeX. Many institutions may have now discovered that the copies of CTeX obtained from Texas A\&M are not (somehow) legal, as indicated by Tomas Rokiki, who has a copyright notice on Ctex sources. I would like to suggest that there has possibly been an abuse of the US copyright laws, and both Ctex and CommonTeX cannot, in fact carry anyone else's copyright except that of Don Knuth, and hence, carry the same distribution rights\slash restrictions [if any] of the original \TeX. Why: If I am not mistaken, US copyright laws suggest that a translation of an originally copyrighted work carries the same copyright as the original --- in other words, mechanical and\slash or hand translation does not obliterate the original copyright. One lawyer, Jordan J. Breslow, did address the issue of `derivative works' in his most enlightening paper. He indicates that the translation of, say a copyrighted COBOL program to BASIC would be the infringement of the copyright owner's exclusive right to make derivative works. Is there something missing? Did Don Knuth drop his copyright on \TeX? Now, it is possible that there exists a license arrangement between Tomas Rokiki and Don Knuth, which allows Tomas to claim copyright on Ctex. If such is the case, I would like to know about it, so that I can understand a request to flush all binaries and sources of Ctex obtained from Texas A\&M. The same issue, of course, applies to the `copyleft' notice of Pat Monardo, for the CommonTeX implementation.'' \smallskip} \rightline{\sl Malcolm Clark} \bigskip \centerline{\bf News from the other side} \medskip \noindent Not only do we have news from the west coast of the US, but there is also a resident UK\TeX ie at Harvard --- \DW. Dominik managed to achieve electronic communication with |texline@ic.cc.vaxa|, and I have synopsised some of his messages to give a Harvard-eye view of the \TeX\ world. I quote: {\narrower ``The latest \TeX\ news I have is that there is a \MF\ course next month at Radnor, Penn, which costs \$650 to attend! Run by Doug Henderson, who did the Personal\TeX\ implementation of \MF. The price is outrageous, and the same goes for the Protext conference here in Boston. Norman Naugle has a new \TeX\ previewer valled CDVI (or something) which is extremely good (according to him!): it is optimised to give very fast screen presentation of a |dvi| file, and apparently it can do all sorts of tricks with colour (why?) on an EGA. He will charge \$175 for it, and is still adding further graphics systems support to it, such as the Olivetti 6300 $640\times400$ board. Frans Velthuis is bringing his work on Devanagari metafonts towards a conclusion. He has more or less linished the character set for Hindi, and is working on the few extra characters needed for Marathi and Sanskrit, and things like the numerals.'' \smallskip} Dominik also raves about ``a fantastic little utility on the PC\TeX\ bulletin board'' which helps in the creation of CM fonts from the |.mf| files distributed with pc{\mf MF}. He also notes that it takes about eight hours to create all 74 CM fonts at one magnification on an 8 MHz AT. And lastly, he reminds me to say something about the programs Graham Asher and Clwyd Probert of Informat are writing: {\narrower\noindent``They are astounding. One creates gigantic \TeX\ macro files automatically, from choices you make on a large set of layered menus. The other, related program reads a {\it wysiwyg} table, and writes the \TeX\ code to typeset it! The dividing lines and corners, etc., can be any characters you choose. Again I was most impressed.'' \smallskip} \noindent There will be something on these new \TeX\ add-on products at \TeX88. Graham will likely be giving at least one paper, and a hands-on demonstration must be inevitable. It is probably true that Informat is the most progressive hive of \TeX\ activity in the UK at present, as Graham's article in the previous \TeX line, `{\bf\TeX\ and the Linotron 101}' and the letter overleaf attests. Graham, Clwyd and the other programmers at Informat are producing some very powerful software which will help in increasing the use of \TeX. Although the menu-driven `front-end' bears some similarity to systems like {\it Page One}, it is far more general, without being more cumbersome or difficult to use. \rightline{\sl Malcolm Clark}