The SEAP could also go online as page images - .gifs or .jpgs of the original pages. I've seen a few 19th century periodicals (North American Review, Harper's) online in this format. I believe Hazelden offers the full text of their publications in this format as well (for example, try http://electricpress.com/book.jsp?Book=1568385188 ). There is no worry about scanning accuracy since you consult and read digital photocopies. If you want to step up to searchability, the inevitably corrupt text produced by an OCR scan can reside "behind" the page image. You can't view this text but you can search it for keywords. Search hits refer you to page images. They won't find every use of a given word and they will turn up some bad hits where another word was mis-scanned as the word you are looking for. But this is better than no searchability. One problem with this method for the SEAP: it has full-size pages (roughly 8 1/2 by 11) so the digital page images would be large and slow to download. It might be easier to put them all on a CD-ROM (if they would fit on that format) and give it away to interested scholars. The online periodicals I've read in this kind of digital storage format usually have smaller pages, say 5 by 8 inches. Still this would be an option if someone wanted to make Cherrington's work easily accessible to all. Jon