Copyright Notice and Software License Copyright 1992, 1994 by Adam Starchild The author owns all copyrights in the software, a owns the trademark under which he distributes the software. Among other things, this means: The software is not public domain software and is not free. Your rights to it are only those provided by this license. You may evaluate the software for a reasonable period. To use the software after your evaluation period, you must pay for its use. As a paid user of the software, you have the right to use the software "just like a book". This means you and any number of people can use it, and it can be used on any number of machines, so long as -- just like a book -- there is NO POSSIBILITY that more than one copy will be used at a time. Use of the software beyond the trial period is copyright infringement unless you pay for its use. Such use also threatens the continuation of the shareware revolution, which has benefited users by its "try before you buy" philosophy and by slowing increases in software prices. If you want to upload the software, you are encouraged to upload the software to bulletin boards. If you are a sysop, you are licensed to permit copies of the software to be made electronically from computer bulletin boards. If you are a shareware disk vendor, you are licensed to distribute the software provided you market the software as shareware using the words "try before you buy" or words of similar meaning, and not to misleadingly market it or label it as fully-paid software. All software distributed under this license must be distributed in complete, unaltered form. No claim is made to copyright in U. S. government materials incorporated in this program, but the modification, editing, compilation, and conversion to electronic book format are all covered by copyright.