These sets of LaTeX input files for the AvantGarde, Bookman, Courier
Helvetica, NewCenturySchoolbook, Palatino, Symbol, Times,
ZapfChancery and ZapfDingbats font families were
created in mid-June 1994 by Sebastian Rahtz
using Alan Jeffrey's fontinst program. 
They are an extract from the font/metrics tree on CTAN
(see the READMEs under the texmf/fonts/adobe/<typeface> directories 
for more precise information.)

The LaTeX input files have been transferred into this TEXINPUTS
path (  texmf/tex/latex/dvips  )

The files in texmf/tex/latex/dvips are

 + .fd (font description) files for use with LaTeX2e
 + a simple LaTeX2e package (e.g. times.sty) to use the new font family
   as appropriate for its type (as roman, sans or typewriter font)

Auxiliary files transferred to texmf/dvips are

 + map files (e.g. ptm.map) which list the raw font names and their
    full PostScript names. These can be added to eg the psfonts.map file
    of dvips to ensure that the driver recognizes the names as those
    of PostScript fonts. (Remember to remove the word original from the
    top of the file if you do this.)
 + a dvips config file (e.g. config.ptm) which can be used to tell dvips
   about the new fonts if you do not want to change the default psfonts.map
   (usage: dvips -Pptm to tell dvips about the Times fonts)
	NOTE: These have to be in some directory in your TEXCONFIG path.
	The config.* and *.map files have been transferred into the 
	canonical texmf/dvips directory, so that the default TEXCONFIG 
	environment will work.

Do not allow files with names like times.sty in
texmf/tex/dvips to coexist at the same priority level with these 
in your TEXINPUTS path.  If such files are needed
for LaTeX209 capability, move them into the latex209 directory
texmf/latex209/dvips.  On the distribution tape, the dvipsk/PSfonts/Makefile
has been edited so that the PSfonts style files are installed into 
texmf/latex209/dvips; this ensures that both LaTeX2e and LaTeX209 sites 
will be able to use dvips with a basic set of PSfonts.

Pierre MacKay for the final UnixTeX distribution
June 24 1944




