[With apologies for cross-posting] Last month, Dai Vaughan, the esteemed British film editor and writer on film, died. Founder of *Definition*, a quarterly film magazine in the 1950s, film editor for Granada TV and the BBC from the 1960s onwards, with prize-winning credits for *This England*, *World In Action*, *Omnibus*, *The Space between Words*, *Disappearing World* and *Arena*, Vaughan was also deservedly known for his books on film, *Portrait of an Invisible Man, The Working Life of Stewart McAllister, Film Editor* (1983) -- a pioneering work about the editor of Humphrey Jennings' *Listen to Britain* -- and *For Documentary: Twelve Essays* (University of California Press, 1999. He was also a novelist and a poet. A series of tributes, including ones by John Corner, Ed Buscombe, Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, Mike Dibb and Patrick Russell, have been collected by Richard MacDonald and Martin Stollery, who interviewed Vaughan in the last two years. Their interviews, the tributes, excerpts from Vaughan's work, and links to online publications by and about him have been posted at the Film Studies For Free website ( http://filmstudiesforfree.blogspot.com/2012/07/for-documentary-remembering-dai- vaughan.html). It's a valuable resource, dedicated to Vaughan's memory, and hopefully of particular use to anyone interested in documentary and ethnographic filmmaking, film editing, British film and television history, and film philosophy and theory. Catherine Grant School of Media, Film and Music, University of Sussex Film Studies For Free ---- For past messages, visit the Screen-L Archives: https://listserv.ua.edu/archives/screen-l.html