Deborah Cameron asks how I felt about her quoting my remarks in her summary of the issues surrounding the use of e-mail messages by other commentators. I read down to the end before I realized that I was being cited/quoted/paraphrased. My notions are more-or-less in the area of common wisdom. Not everybody agrees with my version but those who do could have said the same things I did. If I had been actually quoted and cited, then I would expect permission to have been requested. It's a subtle matter, I suppose. A little like trying to get students to understand that common knowledge does not have to be footnoted (e.g., Winston Churchill was a central figure in WWII). Since in the matter of appropriate usage of e-mail we are all students, we'll just have to muddle through until a latter-day Fowler comes along and makes arguments so persuasive they are accepted by all. Cal Pryluck, Radio-Television-Film, Temple University, Philadelphia <[log in to unmask]> <PRYLUCK@TEMPLEVM>