Many thanks for that excellent link, Arkrite.
I just wish that more publications would handle their archives in that way rather than selling them to JSTOR and similar organisations, where they are put out of the reach of most of us, particularly those of us not based in the UK. I don't mind paying to access archives, as I do with "The Stage", but JSTOR won't accept private subscriptions and most public libraries cannot afford their expensive subscriptions.
This means that only academics, via their universities, get to access these valuable national resources. Whatever happened to Mr Blair's "Education, education, education"?
Last year I needed to access an archived archaeological article about Crete, the island where I live, that had been placed in the so-called "care" of JSTOR. Despite complaining bitterly to JSTOR and the original publisher of the magazine (which included offering to pay for said article), I was forced to obtain photocopies of it from a professor at Victoria University, Australia, who happens to be a friend of my third cousin out there. Postage came to 14 Au $.
So where was the sense in that? JSTOR didn't get an extra cent out of it because the professor just obtained it freely as part of his university's subscription. Rant over!
Maurice