UKTeX Digest    Friday, 15 Nov 1991    Volume 91 : Issue 43

Today's Topics:
 {Q&A}:
                    Re: Literate programming in C
                         Re: Asian Languages
                         Re: Asian Languages
                          fancyheadings.sty
                       Bracket sizes and NFLS.
                   Document identification in LaTeX
                       Multiple-language docs.
                     RE: Multiple-language docs.
                     Re: Multiple-language docs.
                              Japanese.
                    VMS 5.4-2 version of LATMASTER
                  RE: VMS 5.4-2 version of LATMASTER
                       TeX-PS integration again
                    Laser-printer drivers for VMS
 {Announcements}:
              Fonts for commutative diagrams in LamS-TeX
               NTG's Fun with TeX meeting at Eindhoven
                              Drop Caps


Administrivia:
    Moderators:     Peter Abbott (Aston University) and
                    David Osborne (University of Nottingham)
    Contributions:  UKTeX@uk.ac.tex
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------------------------------------------------------------

Date:    Fri, 08 Nov 91 18:33:35 +0000
From:    Dave Love <d.love@uk.ac.daresbury>
Subject: Re: Literate programming in C

>>>>> On Tue, 29 Oct 91 17:16:09 +0100, EPSI!HMS%uucp.epsbln@uk.ac.uknet-relay 
said:

 > I.e. either you put your source through a C-compiler to obtain a program,
 > or you feed the source into TeX, which will convert your C-program into a
 > nicely formatted document -- formatting your C program fragments and all
 > comment, which have to be written in a certain style.

It sounds as though you are after c-no-web from the Aston archive:
[TEX-ARCHIVE.WEB.CNOWEB].  If you're interested in something more elaborate,
see CWEB and SPIDERWEB (in the same place, but probably old versions) or
`noweb' (ftp-able from princeton.edu).  These three require pre-processing the
source.  Cweb and spiderweb will pretty-print the code for you; noweb won't
(unless you write a pretty-printer) but is a simple, flexible system although
dependent on un*x-isms.

------------------------------

Date:    Fri, 08 Nov 91 20:58:00 +0100
From:    KNAPPEN%de.uni-mainz.kph.vkpmzd@uk.ac.nsfnet-relay
Subject: Re: Asian Languages

Keywords: Asian scripts

There is an ipa font by Janene Winter, caled WSUIPA. It's available << from 
all good servers >>, typically under [.mf.wsuipa].

The devanagari font by Frank Velthuis is now in the public domain, and 
available from (at least) ymir.claremont.edu. F. Velthuis has also written 
a preprocessor in C, to convert ASCII'ed indic into TeX/LaTeX source code.

There is also a Tamil font by the University of Washington, which is on the 
YMIR.

Yours, J"org Knappen.

------------------------------

Date:    Mon, 11 Nov 91 15:05:59 -0500
From:    Peter Schmitt <A8131DAL%earn.awiuni11@uk.ac.earn-relay>
Subject: Re: Asian Languages

There already exists a Phontic Font plus style file, available from
Heidelberg and ymir.claremont.edu (I think) and there may be Hindi,
and others too.  Peter Schmitt

------------------------------

Date:    Sat, 09 Nov 91 00:02:11 -0500
From:    Erich Neuwirth <A4422DAB%earn.awiuni11@uk.ac.earn-relay>
Subject: fancyheadings.sty

There has been a question and many answers regarding
multipart headers and footers.
The answer invariably has been to use fancyheadings.sty.
There is another solution: jeep.sty
It is available from all good archives
(I assume Astin is a good one, but we Central Europeans dont
have many chances to find out)
It does multipart headers and some more very practical things,
like making it possible to easily change the sizes of section, chapter..
subsection headers.
It has been described in the latest (and first) TUG newsletter.
 
ERICH NEUWIRTH
BITNET (EARN): A4422DAB@AWIUNI11
INTERNET:      a4422DAB@vm.univie.ac.at = 131.130.1.2
Institute for Statistics and Computer Science
UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA, UNIVERSITAETSSTR. 5/9, A-1010 VIENNA, AUSTRIA
TEL.: +43-1-40407-160    FAX: +43-1-40407-88

------------------------------

Date:    Mon, 11 Nov 91 09:46:02
From:    Mike Piff <PM1MJP@uk.ac.sheffield.primea>
Subject: Bracket sizes and NFLS.

Am I supposed to type

\define@mathgroup\mv@normal3{cmex}{m}{n}

after \input ing latex.tex with the new font loading scheme?

Mike Piff

From   Dr M. J. Piff, Department of Pure Mathematics, PO Box 597,
       Hicks Building, Hounsfield Road,
       SHEFFIELD S10 2UN, England.
Tel.   SHEFFIELD (0742) 768555 Extension 4431.
JANET  MPiff@UK.AC.SHEF.PA  or MPiff@UK.AC.SHEF.IBM

------------------------------

Date:    Mon, 11 Nov 91 09:56:00 +0000
From:    Peter Flynn <CBTS8001%ie.ucc.iruccvax@uk.ac.earn-relay>
Subject: Document identification in LaTeX

I need to put the college seal and name at the top of the title page
of some LaTeX documents, above the document title, in 12pt type (for an
10pt text doc). I have the seal in a font file, so that's not a problem,
but has someone a pointer to some additional code to do this: I can of
course simply stuff in a couple of \centerline{}'s but that doesn't
look like a very PC way of doing it.
 
The other requirement is for version numbering (manually typed) to go
below the author, in text-size type. Any suggestions?
 
///Peter, still feeling constricted by LaTeX

------------------------------

Date:    Mon, 11 Nov 91 10:19:43 +0000
From:    R.A.Reese@uk.ac.hull
Subject: Multiple-language docs.

I've downloaded hyphenation tables for French and Italian from Aston
and looked in the TeXbook and TeX for the Impatient for what to do with
them. The documentation is (putting it kindly) scrappy: one para on page
455 of the TeXbook!
 
I gather that what I need to do is to make an extension to plain.tex and
read the additional hyphenation patterns into INITEX with \language set
to successive integers. But what else? What about \lefthyphenmin and
\righthyphenmin? What about new ligatures?
 
So, has anyone written the macros to define each of the languages in the
archive, e.g.,
 
\def\french{\language1\input frhyphen\lefthyphenmin ... etc.}
 
so that I can run INITEX and document the available \language values?
 
More generally, is there an agreed method for installing and providing
multiple languages?

------------------------------

Date:    Mon, 11 Nov 91 13:30:07 +0000
From:    Philip Taylor (RHBNC) <P.Taylor@uk.ac.rhbnc.vax>
Subject: RE: Multiple-language docs.

>>> I've downloaded hyphenation tables for French and Italian from Aston
>>> and looked in the TeXbook and TeX for the Impatient for what to do with
>>> them. The documentation is (putting it kindly) scrappy: one para on page
>>> 455 of the TeXbook!

>>> I gather that what I need to do is to make an extension to plain.tex and
>>> read the additional hyphenation patterns into INITEX with \language set
>>> to successive integers. But what else? What about \lefthyphenmin and
>>> \righthyphenmin? What about new ligatures?

1) Don't explicitly increment \language; the \newlanguage of Plain TeX
   is there for just such purposes, and will ensure that your format is
   both portable and general.
 
>>> So, has anyone written the macros to define each of the languages in the
>>> archive, e.g.,
 
>>> \def\french{\language1\input frhyphen\lefthyphenmin ... etc.}

2) Right idea, wrong implementation; the treatment of languages has to be
   carried out in two steps:

   a) INITEX: (but after PLAIN, so that \newlanguage is defined)

        \newlanguage \french
        \newlanguage \german
        \newlanguage \!kung % (Joke)

        \language \french
        \input frhyphen

        \language \german
        \input grhyphen

        <etc>

        \def \French 
            {\language \french 
             \lefthyphenmin = <$n$>
             \righthyphenmin = <$m$>
            }

        <etc>

>>> so that I can run INITEX and document the available \language values?
 
Ligatures are left to the percipient readder !

>>> More generally, is there an agreed method for installing and providing
>>> multiple languages?

Well, \newlanguage is the primary `agreed' method, but there is still
considerable discussion (and disagreement) on such topics as

i)   Should \language 0 => US English in all formats ?
ii)  Should characters > 127 be active or passive ?
iii) <etc>

P.S. Don't forget to use \setlanguage when you need it !

                                        Philip Taylor
                            ``The University of London at Windsor''

------------------------------

Date:    Mon, 11 Nov 91 12:38:35 +0000
From:    Malcolm Clark <malcolmc@uk.ac.pcl.sun>
Subject: Re: Multiple-language docs.

\lefthyphenmin and \righthyphenmin are not
language specific (just one of DeK's little
mistakes). hyphenation patterns can only
be read in by vir/ini-tex, not by production
tex (although some production tex's are initex
i think).

but yes, the documentation is, as ever, inadequate.
i think you are supoosed to read the program.

m

------------------------------

Date:    Mon, 11 Nov 91 10:26:56 +0000
From:    R.A.Reese@uk.ac.hull
Subject: Japanese.

I probably made a mistake adding this as a postscript to a previous
question, since I got no replies.
 
I've a user who wants to set Japanese. Could someone please tell me
what I need to obtain to add to existing emTeX for this. There's a
reference in a TUGboat to JemTeX, but as the author says, he assumes
you already have a Japanese editor. The files in the JTeX section of
the archive are similarly incomplete. I presume I need a massive new
set of Kanji fonts from somewhere.
 
If I still get no replies from the UK, the TUG directory does list
Email addresses for users in Japan.

------------------------------

Date:    Tue, 12 Nov 91 17:04:00 +0000
From:    Diane Skinner x5828 <"CCF::DES"@uk.mod.hermes>
Subject: VMS 5.4-2 version of LATMASTER

We have a problem and wonder if anyone can help:

     We recently installed the VMS 5.4-2 version of LATMASTER,
     together with a patch from DEC.  

     One of our users prints LaTeX files from the VAX onto an HP
     Laserjet Series III printer.  Up until the upgrade, he had no
     problems.  However, the printer is now printing out garbled text
     and overprinting; only the first page seems to get printed out.

     The user has transferred the DVI-JEP file onto his PC using
     Kermit.  With the same printer attached to his PC, he can
     successfully print the file using the PC version of LaTeX.

     We have tested the port with another printer, tried changing the
     port, checked the port settings etc. and the problem still
     continues.

     Has anyone out there had similar problems with this version of
     LATMASTER?  Please reply to:

          DES%HERMES.MOD.UK@RELAY.MOD.UK 

------------------------------

Date:    Tue, 12 Nov 91 17:38:00 +0000
From:    "Brian {Hamilton Kelly} " <TEX@uk.ac.cranfield.rmcs>
Subject: RE: VMS 5.4-2 version of LATMASTER

In a message (to UKTeX) of Tue, 12 Nov 91 17:04 GMT, 
Diane Skinner x5828 <"CCF::DES"@uk.mod.hermes> wrote:

> We have a problem and wonder if anyone can help:
> 
>      We recently installed the VMS 5.4-2 version of LATMASTER,
>      together with a patch from DEC.  
> 
>      One of our users prints LaTeX files from the VAX onto an HP
>      Laserjet Series III printer.  Up until the upgrade, he had no
>      problems.  However, the printer is now printing out garbled text
>      and overprinting; only the first page seems to get printed out.

You don't say how he formerly used to send the .jep file from the VAX to
the LJ3.  Was the printer under the control of a PRINT queue, or just
addressed as a terminal line?  I suspect that now that it's under the
control of LATMASTER (with which I'm not familiar), the software is
applying some form of (unwanted) formatting to the file in transit.  Are
there any options that permit you to set up the printer so that the .jep
file can be sent to it with the equivalent of PRINT/PASSALL?  If so, I
suggest that you try it under that regime.

On the other hand, it may be some problem with the maximum packet length
that can be transferred under the LAT protocol; I know that this can
cause problems if one tries to use Kermit with SET PORT DECNET; the LAT
protocol collapses in a very unfriendly fashion if the Kermit tries to
send packets longer than about 256 characters (which is a great shame,
when one could envisage using nice big packets to get fast transfers).
 
>      The user has transferred the DVI-JEP file onto his PC using
>      Kermit.  With the same printer attached to his PC, he can
>      successfully print the file using the PC version of LaTeX.

Presumably he then uses the MS-DOS command COPY with the /B switch to
ensure that the whole file passes through verbatim.
 
>      We have tested the port with another printer, tried changing the
>      port, checked the port settings etc. and the problem still
>      continues.

Can you print ordinary (ASCII) text files on the printer using
LATMASTER?  If not, forget all that I've already said, and fix that
first.  But I guess that you probably can.  Have you asked DEC if there
are any restrictions on the format of data that can be transferred using
the LAT protocol?
 
Anyway, there's a few thoughts to muddy the waters!

                               Brian {Hamilton Kelly}

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+ Phone:     Swindon (0793) 785252 (UK), +44-793-785252 (International)   +
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 14 Nov 91 04:47:26 +0100
From:    Laurent Siebenmann <sieben%fr.matups.diamant@uk.ac.mhs-relay>
Subject: TeX-PS integration again


TeX-Postscript integration.

Jonathan Taylor <"HOOKE::ICARUS::TAYLOR"@isams.atm.ox.ac.uk> writes:
   > I am trying to use LATEX with a postscript printer and include
   > encapsulated postscript graph files.

        The following files should provide TeX-PostScript integration
with any TeX format and (almost) any ".dvi"-to-PostScript printer
driver.  Tell me if you encounter problems.

         BoxedEPSF.tex
         BoxedEPSF.doc
         LabelFig.tex

Anonymous ftp postings:

        rusinfo.rus.uni-stuttgart.de
        labrea.stanford.edu

Also, they were sent to UKTeX archive.

Insist on versions >= Oct 1991.

     Laurent Siebenmann
    < lcs@matups.matups.fr>

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 14 Nov 91 08:17:00 +0000
From:    David Harper <ADH@uk.ac.qmw.starlink>
Subject: Laser-printer drivers for VMS

Do you have the VAX/VMS object file for the Canon laser-printer driver
DVICAN.EXE in the archive ? I've searched the [.drivers] and [.binary.vms]
directories of the archive but I can't find an object file for DVICAN.

I'm asking on behalf of a colleague who is trying to build a TeX setup
from scratch on a VMS system which isn't connected to JANET. I copied our
entire TeX directory structure onto tape for him, with EXE files but not
OBJ files. When he tried to run the EXE files, they wouldn't work due to
a mismatch in the Pascal run-time libraries, hence he needs the OBJ files
to re-link to produce EXE files based on the Pascal RTLs on his machine.
Unfortunately, our TeXpert didn't keep the OBJ files when he installed TeX
on qmw.star.

I'd be grateful for any advice you might have, especially as regards installing
TeX from scratch under VMS.

Many thanks,

              David Harper

              QMW Astronomy Unit

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 07 Nov 91 14:12:00 +0200
From:    Michael Maschler 
         <MASCHLER%il.ac.huji.hujivms@uk.ac.nsfnet-relay>
Subject: Fonts for commutative diagrams in LamS-TeX

There were questions concerining the availability of .pk fonts of
LamS-TeX. (These are needed for drawing commutative diagrams.)
Dr. Michael Spivak answers as follows:


 .PK FILES FOR LAMSTEX FONTS

Apparently many ftp sites for LamS-TeX have only MetaFont sources
for the LamS-TeX fonts, not .pk files, which is useless or quite
inconvenient for many.

I can supply a diskette with the following:
__________________________________________________

(a) Directories          (b) Each directory has subdirectories
 \300  (for 300dpi)       \0  (for unmagnified fonts)
 \240  (for 240dpi)       \H  (for fonts at \magstephalf)
 \180  (for 180dpi)       \1  (for fonts at \magstep1)
 \118  (for 118dpi)       \2  (for fonts at \magstep2)

(c)  Each of these subdirectories then has lams1.pk, ... , lams5.pk.
__________________________________________________

The kinds of diskettes I can supply are:

  (A) A 5 1/2 inch, double sided, double density, IBM diskette

  (B) A 3 1/2 inch, high density, IBM diskette

  (C) A 3 1/2 inch, double sided, double density, diskette for Macintosh,

      for use with OzTeX

  (D) A 3 1/2 inch, double sided, double density, diskette for Macintosh

      containing font suitcases for TeXtures
__________________________________________________

The charge for this service is $7.00, which includes the diskette and
air postage.
__________________________________________________

Please understand that I am not selling these, I am providing them as
a service---I don't enjoy sitting around initializing and copying diskettes!

Please, no purchase orders, no receipts.

Send a check, ON A U.S. BANK AND MICRO-ENCODED, or a Visa or Mastercard
number, together with expiration date.

Please BE CERTAIN to specify whether you want (A), (B), (C), or (D).

Michael Spivak
c/o TeXplorators
3701 W. Alabama, Suite 450-273
Houston, TX 77027 U.S.A.

e-mail: spivak@rice.edu

------------------------------

Date:    Fri, 08 Nov 91 16:47:00 +0700
From:    CGL@nl.RUG.RUGR86
Subject: NTG's Fun with TeX meeting at Eindhoven

 
=======================================================================
Nederlandstalige TeX Gebruikersgroep (Dutch-language TeX Usersgroup)
=======================================================================
 
Address  : P.O. box 394
           1740 AJ Schagen
           The Netherlands
                                                      November 8th, 1991
 
 
The 8-th Dutch TeX Usergroup meeting will be taken place on
          >>>>  thursday november 21th, 1991  <<<<
at the Computer Centre of the Technical University Eindhoven (Den Dolech 2
Eindhoven).
 
The city Eindhoven is situated in the south-west part of the Netherlands,
about 30 minutes by train from the German border and even not far from the
TeX community in the northern part of France.
 
The meeting is free (except the lunch: f. 12,50) for members of the Local
TeX User groups (DANTE, GUTenberg, UKTUG etc).
 
The agenda of the meeting:
 
In the morning local stuff (language will be Dutch)
10:00  Welcome
10:05  MAPS 91.2 (Minutes and APpendices) discussion
10:30  Announcements, Board topics, etc
11:00  Reports from the NTG working groups
11:45  Questions from the participants
 
12:00  Lunch
 
In the afternoon `TeX & FuN' presentations (>>language will be English<<)
13:30  Towers of Hanoi with TeX            Kees van der Laan
13:45  Dating with TeX                     Theo Jurriens
14:00  Chess with TeX and LaTeX            Piet Tutelaers
14:30  Bridge with TeX and LaTeX           Kees van der Laan
 
15:00  Tea break
 
15:30  GO with TeX                         Hanna Lolodziejska
16:00  Music with TeX                      Daniel Taupin
 
 
TeX documentation/magazines are available for those participants interested
in what's happening outside their local office.
Also some (TeX) books will be sold at 10% discount.
 
Interested in the NTG meeting?
Registration is necessary!
 
Please send full name + address + Local TeX Usergroup membership number
to: vannes@ecn.nl  before November 15th.
Let me also know if you arrive before lunch.
 
 
Gerard van Nes
secretary NTG
vannes@ecn.nl
 
=======================================================================

------------------------------

Date:    Wed, 13 Nov 91 15:01:52 +0000
From:    chris@uucp.perisl
Subject: Drop Caps

I wonder whether any of your readers are interested in a TeX macro to perform 
dropped capitals -- Try running the following plain TeX program.

- ------------------------------Cut Here---------------------------------------
\catcode`\@=11
\newbox\l@box
%
% The 2754 is calculated as 
% \newfont\gfont=cmr17
% \newbox\Rbox\setbox\Rbox=\hbox{\gfont A}%\showbox\Rbox
% (\ht\strutbox (=8.5pt) + 2\baselineskip (=24pt)) / \ht\Rbox(=11.8pt) *1000
% This makes the character top be at the top of a strut. I.e. somewhat higher
% than normal. But this probably doesn't matter since there is likely to be
% a large gap before this paragraph anyway!
%
\font\lfont=cmr17 scaled 2754

\def\dropcap#1{\par\setbox\l@box=\hbox{\vtop{\hrule height 0pt\hbox{\lfont #1}}
}%
\hangindent=\wd\l@box\hangafter=-3\relax%
\dp\l@box=0pt\noindent%
\llap{\raise\ht\strutbox\box\l@box}}

\catcode`\@=12

\dropcap This is a piece of text and some more and some more
and some more and some more and some more and some more and some more
and some more and some more and some more and some more and some more
and some more and some more and some more and some more and some more
and some more and some more and some more and some more and some more
and some more and some more and some more and some more and some more
and some more and some more.

\bye
- ------------------------------Cut Here---------------------------------------

Chris Selwyn
Perihelion Software

------------------------------

                  UK TeX ARCHIVE at ASTON UNIVERSITY
                         >>>  UK.AC.TEX  <<<

                  JANET Interactive and NIFTP access
             Host: uk.ac.tex    (JANET DTE 000020120091)
                 Username: public    Password: public
           [Sorry, no Internet ftp access is available yet]

                         *** Mail server ***
               Send mail to TeXserver@uk.ac.tex (JANET)
              or TeXserver@tex.ac.uk (rest of the world)
              with message body containing the word HELP

\section FILES OF INTEREST

    [tex-archive]00readme.txt
    [tex-archive]00directory.list        [tex-archive]00directory.size
    [tex-archive]00directory_dates.list  [tex-archive]00last30days.files

\section DIGESTS

    This year's UKTeX back issues are stored in the archive in directory
      [tex-archive.digests.uktex.91]
    This year's TeXhax back issues are stored in the archive in directory
      [tex-archive.digests.texhax.91]
      Latest TeXhax: #50
    TeXMaG back issues are stored in the archive in directory
      [tex-archive.digests.tex-mag]
      Latest TeXMaG: V5N3

\section MEDIA DISTRIBUTIONS

\subsection Washington Unix TeX distribution tape
    Latest copy of May/June 1991 contains:
    TeX 3.14, LaTeX 2.09, Metafont 2.7, plus many utilities
    suitable for Unix 4.2/4.3BSD & System V
    tar format, 1600bpi, blockfactor 20, 1 file (36Mb)
    Copies available on:
      One 2400ft 0.5" tape sent with return labels AND return postage to Aston
   OR One Quarter-Inch Cartridge, QIC-120 or QIC-150 format (DC600A or DC6150)
      sent with envelope AND stamps for return postage to Nottingham
    (addresses below).

\subsection VMS tapes
    VMS backup of the archive requires two 2400ft tapes at 6250bpi.
    VMS backup of TeX 2.991 plus PSprint requires one 2400ft tape.

\subsection Exabyte 8mm tapes
    Same contents available as 0.5" tapes.
    Following tape types available: SONY Video 8 cassette P5 90MP,
    MAXELL Video 8 cassette P5-90, TDK Video 8 cassette P5-90MPB

\section TeX IMPLEMENTATIONS FOR SMALL COMPUTERS

\subsection OzTeX (for Macintosh)
    Send 10 UNFORMATTED 800K disks to Aston with return postage.

\subsection emTeX (for MS-DOS)
    The complete package (3.5" High density disk format ONLY)
    is available from Aston at a cost of 15 pounds,
      including disks, post and packing.
    All other enquiries and disk formats should be directed to:
    Eigen PD Software, P.O. Box 722, Swindon SN2 6YB  (tel: 0793-611270)
    (JANET e-mail address: kellett@uk.ac.cran.rmcs)
    
\subsection TeX for the Atari ST
    All enquiries for disks etc. should be directed to:
    The South West Software Library, P.O. Box 562, Wimborne, Dorset BH21 2YD
    (JANET e-mail address: mdryden@uk.co.compulink.cix)

\section POSTAGE RATES
    All prices in Pounds Sterling.
    For Aston orders, make cheques payable to Aston University.

    0.5" tapes: UK: 2.50 (one tape),  5.00 (two tapes).
            Europe: 5.00 (one tape),  9.00 (two tapes).
            Outside Europe please enquire.
    8mm tapes:
            UK: 1.00,  Europe: 2.00.
    Quarter-inch cartridges:
            UK: 1.00,  Europe: 2.00.
    Diskettes:
    Quantity/Size   Europe   World    UK 1st   UK 2nd
      18/3.5"        3.10     5.10     1.40     1.10
      11/3.5"        1.80     2.90     0.80     0.65
      18/5.25"       1.20     2.00     0.60     0.50
      11/5.25"       0.80     1.30     0.50     0.35

\section POSTAL ADDRESSES
    Please include SELF-ADDRESSED ADHESIVE LABELS for return postage.

    Peter Abbott
    Information Systems, Aston University, Aston Triangle, Birmingham B4 7ET

    David Osborne
    Cripps Computing Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK
    (for Quarter-inch cartridges ONLY -- include stamps for return postage)

\section UK TeX USERS GROUP

    For details, contact:
    Malcolm Clark
    IRS, Polytechnic of Central London,
    115 New Cavendish Street, London W1M 8JS     e-mail: malcolmc@uk.ac.pcl.mol
e
 or
    Geeti Granger, John Wiley & Sons,
    Baffins Lane, Chichester, W Sussex PO19 1UD

\bye

End of UKTeX Digest [Volume 91 Issue 43]
****************************************