Page:Copyright, Its History And Its Law (1912).djvu/551

 BRITISH COPYRIGHT ACT, 191 1 519

any mould, cast, sketch, plan, model, or study made by him for the purpose of the work, provided that he does not thereby repeat or imitate the main design of that work:

(iii) The making or publishing of paintings, drawings, engravings, or photographs of a work of sculpture or artistic craftsmanship, if permanently situate in a public place or building, or the making or publishing of pciintings, drawings, engravings, or photographs (which are not in the nature of architectural draw- ings or plans) of any architectural work of art:

(iv) The publication in a collection, mainly composed of non-copyright matter, bon& fide intended for the use of schools, and so described in the title and in any advertisements issued by the publisher, of short passages from published literary works not themselves published for the use of schools in which copyright subsists: Provided that not more than two of such passages from works by the same author are published by the same publisher within five years, and that the source from which such passages are taken is acknowledged : (v) The publication in a newspaper of a report of a lecture delivered in public, unless the report is prohibited by conspicuous written or printed no- tice affixed before and maintained during the lec- ture at or about the main entrance of the building in which the lecture is given, and, except whilst the building is being used for public worship, in a posi- tion near the lecturer; but nothing in this para- graph shall affect the provisions in paragraph (i) as to newspaper summaries:

(vi) The reading or recitation in public by one person of any reasonable extract from any published work.

(2) Copyright in a work shall also be deemed to be in- fringed by any person who —

(a) sells or lets for hire, or by way of trade exposes or offers for sale or hire; or

(b) distributes either for the purposes of trade or to such