Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!mnetor!seismo!esosun!ucsdhub!sdcsvax!ucbvax!ADS.ARPA!Info-Graphics-Request From: Info-Graphics-Request@ADS.ARPA (Info-Graphics moderator Andy Cromarty) Newsgroups: comp.graphics.digest Subject: Info-Graphics Digest Message-ID: <8704261944.AA07388@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> Date: Sun, 26-Apr-87 06:00:45 EDT Article-I.D.: ucbvax.8704261944.AA07388 Posted: Sun Apr 26 06:00:45 1987 Date-Received: Mon, 27-Apr-87 00:40:02 EDT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: Info-Graphics@ADS.ARPA Distribution: world Organization: The ARPA Internet Lines: 787 Approved: info-graphics@ads.arpa Info-Graphics Digest Sun Apr 26 03:00:45 PDT 1987 - Send submissions to Info-Graphics@ADS.ARPA - Send requests for list membership to Info-Graphics-Request@ADS.ARPA Today's Topics: Info-Graphics Digest GETAFM Posted on net.sources -- print in fonts you never knew you had. PC graphics cards/standards/monitors Eye tracking devices and smooth movement 4/28 ACM SIGGRAPH/SIGBIG lecture on Vector and parallel processing SURFMODL 1.1 available simtel20 Help needed restoring ancient computer system BITNET mail follows Info-Graphics Digest GETAFM Posted on net.sources -- print in fonts you never knew you had. PC graphics cards/standards/monitors Eye tracking devices and smooth movement 4/28 ACM SIGGRAPH/SIGBIG lecture on Vector and parallel processing SURFMODL 1.1 available Digest graphics mailing list ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Info-Graphics-Request%ADS.ARPA%CERNVAX.BITNET@wiscvm.wisc.edu from SMTP@WISCVM.BITNET via rscs. X-Bitnet-Sender: Info-Graphics moderator Andy Cromarty Subject: PC graphics cards/standards/monitors I have just started looking at all these graphics cards for PC's (we have zeniths with IBM cards here at Queens) and am frankly getting quite confused about all the different standards (CGA, EGA, HERC, ...the new IBM standard) as well as what screen works with what (monochrome, high-res, ttl...) I have some vendor documentation but it's difficult to see the forest for the trees. Is there any article or reference out there that gives a clear, simple overview of the whole subject of graphics cards/standards/monitors? Please send any mail to me, I will forward a list of responses to this list. thanks in advance, Kevin Broekhoven Applications programmer (graphics) Computing and Communications Services Queens University K7L-3N6 (613) 545-2235 Mailnet, Bitnet, NetNorth: BROEKHVN at QUCDN ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 13 Apr 87 16:32:05 PST From: Jeffrey Mulligan Subject: Eye tracking devices and smooth movement pwha@tut.cc.rochester.edu (Bill Haake): > > > by an eye tracking device (interfaced to 11/73). It is most important that > "the movement" appear smooth, i.e. 1 pixel at a time and that the movement > can be synchronized with data collected from the eye tracker. We would > like to create the movement by hardware pan and scroll at one pixel > resolution, but color map animation techniques or double frame buffer > methods that can be performed For smooth movement you might want to consider vector plotting. I had a very nice system running off of an 11-23 that consisted of: A 3 board set from ADAC (Mass. company, check advertiser index in HARCOPY), consisting of DMA interface, a/d board, and expander board with 2 d/a's (part numbers 1023ad, 1023ex and 1620dma, I think). A programmable clock board, also from ADAC. A small plotting scope (Hewlett-Packard 1350 I think). We chose the ADAC boards because they were they only ones which offered DMA-driven DAC's. With DMA, we could plot points at about 10 usec /point. Animated displays consisting of ~512 points per frame could easily be displayed at 100 Hz, with higher refresh rates possible as the number of points was decreased. The DAC's were 12 bit, giving better positional resolution that a raster system without anti-aliasing. We also had a raster unit attached to this system: an AED 767. (Advanced Electronic Devices, Sunnyvale CA) 1K by 1K frame buffer, displaying 480 x 640 at 80 Hz (Yes, that's 80 not 60), interlaced. Price was about $7K back then, probably cheaper now. We had it driving a high quality monitor which cost another $7K itself. Hope this was some help. Jeff Mulligan (jbm@ames-aurora.arpa) NASA/Ames Research Ctr., Mail Stop 239-3, Moffet Field CA, 94035 (415) 694-5150 ------------------------------ From: Eugene Miya N. Date: 15 Apr 1987 1725-PST (Wednesday) Subject: 4/28 ACM SIGGRAPH/SIGBIG lecture on Vector and parallel processing [Of interest to those in or near the San Francisco Bay Area:] Bay Area ACM/SIGGRAPH and SIGBIG present: "A Quick Introduction to Vector and Parallel Processors for Graphics Programmers" Speaker: Richard Friedman Sr. Systems Analyst, Pacific-Sierra Research Do you believe in the Desktop Cray? Computer graphics is extremely compute intensive, hence frequent use of supercomputers. Many such features are finding their way into smaller mini-supercomputers, main frames, and now personal computers. In the not too distant future, we will see the day of the "Desktop Cray." The question is not "if" but "when?" We have invited our speaker to give us a glimpse into the future. Topic: Richard Friedman will give us a quick tour thru today's "supercomputers," along with the joys and difficulties of programming them for real applications. To utilize these machines both easy and radical changes in coding styles are required. He will address the questions: "What is vectorization?" "How do you program for parallel execution?" and "What about portability?" among others. About the Speaker: Mr. Friedman started working with state-of-the-art supercomputers (CDC 6600) in 1965 at the Courant Institue of New York Univ. From 1968 to 1981, he was in charge of programming languages and libraries (CDC 6600 and 7600) at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory of UC Berkeley. He spent 1977 at the European Weather Centre (ECMWF) in England which was one of the early Cray-1 sites. Since joining Pacific-Sierra Research, Mr. Friedman has created special applications software for the Cray and Cyber-205 systems and has been involved with development on Alliant, SCS, and other supercomputer systems. When Tuesday April 28, at 8 PM Where: Hewlett-Packard (The Oak Room) 19447 Pruneridge Ave., Cupertino, CA ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Apr 87 7:52:31 EST From: Kenneth Van Camp -FSAC- Subject: SURFMODL 1.1 available SURFMODL (surface/solids modeling program for the IBM PC and compatibles) version 1.1 is now available from Simtel-20. It is broken into two archives; the first contains the full source code (4000+ lines of Turbo Pascal code), documentation, and example data files. The second contains several different versions of the executable code to support the Hercules graphics board, CGA, EGA, Heath/Zenith Z-100, AT&T 6300, Sanyo MBC-55x, and IBM 3270. You will need the following two files: Filename Type Bytes CRC Directory PD: SURFMODL.ARC BINARY 234507 F713H SURFMVSN.ARC BINARY 346348 5759H --Ken Van Camp ------------------------------ End of INFO-GRAPHICS ******************** ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 20 Apr 87 06:48:01 pst From: Keith Winter Subject: simtel20 I have tried several times to retrieve files from the archives at simtel20 and have failed every time. I am not on the arpa net. I have attempted to use the instructions posted some time ago to retrieve files but with negative results. The message I usualy receive is 'host unknown -- ...'. Is there a way, that has been verified, for me to get to the archives? I would sure appreciate any help you can give me. Thank you. Keith Winter {...!decwrl!nsc!winter} ------------------------------ via Janet with NIFTP id aa09757; 21 Apr 87 8:25 WET Date: 21-APR-1987 09:23:12 From: HEWITT%graphics.computer-science.manchester.ac.uk@Cs.Ucl.AC.UK Dear info-graphics, Following is announcments of four workshops being organised by EUROGRAPHICS. I would appreciate you sticking them in the graphics mailing list. The deadlines for the first three say the 30th April, but as soon as possible will do! Terry Hewitt Chairman Eurographics Workshops and Books Board ******************************************************************************** THE EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION FOR COMPUTER GRAPHICS Call for Contributions to a Workshop HIGHER LEVEL TOOLS FOR WINDOW MANAGEMENT 22nd - 24th August 1987, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Scope/Aim The past few years has seen the proliferation of window managers and software using them. They now form an integral part of the software available on many general purpose workstations. These window managers differ in their conceptual models, the facilities offered to the application programmer, and the facilities offered to the user for managing the display. In the light of experience, progress is being made toward resolving these differences. This workshop will examine questions that relate to more powerful tools, both for the user and for the programmer. Questions to be considered are: When and how should windows be used? One per application, to permit multi-tasking? Many per application, to permit a more expressive interface? What alternative paradigms could be used instead? What policy-making tools can be provided to ease the burden on the user? What automation of screen layout is desirable? How much tailorability (by the user) is really useful What tools can be provided to assist the application programmer? What tools are required to simplify the programming of presentation, interaction and feedback? Can higher levels of abstraction be provided which satisfy a range of application domains? Can good interaction styles be provided using a range of input devices? What are the performance and portability requirements? Workshop plan Contributions which address one or more of these questions are solicited. The workshop will occupy three days, evenly divided into presentations and discussions. Up to 10 invited papers and 10 refereed papers will be presented. Working group discussions will be held on selected topics, and the outcome reported to plenary sessions. Participants will be limited to approximately 50. It is intended that the workshop proceedings be published. Speakers will be given the opportunity to revise their papers before publication Organisation Workshop Chairman: W. T. Hewitt (University of Manchester, UK) Program Chairman: A. S. Williams (RAL, UK) Program committee: P. J. W. ten Hagen (CWI, NL) M. Muth (ZGDV, D) M. Schmidt (SIEMENS,FRG) J. P. Bourguignon (Bull, F) A. Kilgour (University of Glasgow, UK) Schedule 30th April 1987, Deadline for extended abstract (up to 1,000 words). (Or as soon as possible, please let W T Hewitt know you intend to submit a position paper). May 1987, Notification of acceptance. 22nd - 24th August , 1987 WORKSHOP (Full papers are submitted). 26th - 28th Eurographics 87 - Amsterdam, Why not attend, you are already there! Information SEE BOTTOM ******************************************************************************** THE EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION FOR COMPUTER GRAPHICS Call for Contributions to the Second Eurographics Workshop GRAPHICS HARDWARE 24th - 25th August 1987, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Scope/Aim The ongoing advances in micro-electronics and the availability of VLSI-design systems offer graphics systems designers totally new options for graphics hardware solutions. The workshop brings together leading workers in the field to present the state-of-the-art, to discuss alternative architectures, to relate design styles to the different tasks in graphics systems and to foresee achievable progress in the next few years. Workshop plan A mixture of invited and refereed papers will be presented. Ample time to discuss all interesting details and to summarise the results achieved in the workshop will be guaranteed. The number of participants will be limited to 30. It is intended that the workshop proceedings be published. Speakers will be given the opportunity to revise their papers before publication. Organisation Workshop Co-Chairmen: Prof Dr W Strasser (Institut fur Informatik,Tubingen, FRG) Drs F kuijk (CWI, NL) Program committee: Mr M Corthout (Philips, NL) Prof R L Grimsdale, (University of Sussex, UK) Mr Leray (CCETT, F) Dr A Thomas (University of Sussex, UK) Dr J Skytta (Helsinki University of Technology, FIN) Schedule 30th April 1987, Deadline for extended abstract (up to 1,000 words). (Or as soon as possible, please let W T Hewitt know you intend to submit a position paper). May 1987, Notification of acceptance. 24th - 25th August , 1987 WORKSHOP (Full papers are submitted). 26th - 28th Eurographics 87 - Amsterdam, Why not attend, you are already there! Information SEE BOTTOM ******************************************************************************** Eurographics Association and the National Bureau of Standards, USA Request Contributions to a Workshop THE CGM IN THE REAL WORLD 15th - 17th September 1987, NBS, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA. Scope/Aim The Computer Graphics Metafile is now an ANSI standard and has been approved for progression to an ISO standard. This workshop will gather together experts in this field to consider the impact of this standard in a variety of environments. Presentations will include: a consideration of the standards work which produced the CGM and an assessment of the current standards activity for metafiles; specific needs and implementation stratergies; users evaluations of metafile implementations; validation of metafiles. All potential participants will be expected to submit a position paper which if accepted by the program committee, will be presented at the workshop. The participants will also develop the ideas presented during the workshop. Papers are welcome on the following topics: the use of CGM in various environments e.g. industry; publishing; validation testing of metafiles; and any other areas realting to CGM. Workshop plan The workshop will occupy three days, evenly divided into presentations and discussions. Up to 10 invited papers and 10 refereed papers will be presented. Working group discussions will be held on selected topics, and the outcome reported to plenary sessions. Participants will be limited to approximately 50. It is intended that the workshop proceedings be published. Speakers will be given the opportunity to revise their papers before publication. Organisation Workshop Co-Chairmen: Mr W T Hewitt (University ofManchester, UK) Mr M Skall (National Bureau of Standards, USA) Program committee: Dr A Mumford (Loughborough, University of Technology, UK) Dr P Bono (USA) Mr L Henderson (USA) Mr S Carson(USA) Schedule 30th April 1987, Deadline for extended abstract (up to 1,000 words). (Or as soon as possible, please let W T Hewitt know you intend to submit a position paper). May 1987, Notification of acceptance. August 1987 Full paper submitted). 15th - 17th September 1987, WORKSHOP. Information SEE BOTTOM ******************************************************************************** THE EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION FOR COMPUTER GRAPHICS Call for Contributions to a Workshop THE GKS REVIEW 26th and 27th September, 1987, Moorside Hotel, Disley, Manchester, U.K. Scope/Aim GKS became an international standard in 1985. A number of implementations now exist and are in constant use. The working group on computer graphics within the International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO TC97/SC21/WG2) has asked its member bodies to look to a review of GKS. The workshop will investigate the following questions: Which features of GKS are good? What are the deficiencie of GKS? Is there a need for a minimal GKS? What should be added to GKS? When should GKS be modified? What attempt should be made to restrict the changes to GKS both in this and future revisions. Should certain features be labelled as 'deprecated' - a candidate for possible removal in a future revision as for Fortran 8X. This workshop is being organised in conjunction with the BSI Graphics Panel (BSI IST/21/2). Participation is NOT restricted to UK residents. Participants will be selected on the basis of submitted position papers. Workshop plan Contributions which address one or more of these questions are solicited. The workshop will occupy two days, evenly divided into presentations and discussions. A maximum of 10 invited papers and 10 refereed papers will be presented. Working group discussions will be held on selected topics, and the outcome reported to plenary sessions. Participants will be limited to approximately 50. It is intended that the workshop proceedings be published. Speakers will be given the opportunity to revise their papers before publication. Organisation Program Chairman: Professor F R A Hopgood (RAL, UK) Program Committee: D A Duce (RAL, UK) W T Hewitt (University of Manchester, UK) I Herman (Insotec, FRG) C Cartledge (University of Sheffield, UK) Schedule 30th June 1987, Deadline for extended abstract (up to 1,000 words). July 1987, Notification of acceptance. 26 - 27th September, 1987 WORKSHOP (Full papers are submitted). Information Please submit an extended abstract (up to 1,000 words) or send for further details to: Mr W T Hewitt EG Workshops and Books Board at one of the following addresses: Computer Graphics Unit P O Box 38 P O Box 16 University of Manchester Abingdon 1288 Aire-la-Ville(GE) Oxford Road Oxon OX14 1 PX Manchester M13 9PL United Kingdom United Kingdom Switzerland Telephone: International +44 61 273 7121 Extension 5404 National 061 273 7121 Extension 5404 Electronic Mail: JANET (UK) Network Address: Hewitt@UK.AC.MAN.CS.CGU ARPA Address: Hewitt!cgu.cs.man.ac.uk@cs.ucl.ac.uk ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 21 Apr 87 17:05 CST From: Subject: Help needed restoring ancient computer system X-Original-To: INFO-GRAPHICS@ADS.ARPA,INFO-HAMS@SIMTEL20.ARPA, INFO-RSTS%MIT-OZ@MC.LCS.MIT.EDU,INFO-TERMS@MC.LCS.MIT.EDU, MCGUIRE I'll be deeply indebted to any person who can provide me with the following information. I am restoring a vintage-1974 Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-11 based graphics system, including the following components: Digital PDP-11/10 (`decgraphic 11/10') CalComp 565 plotter Teletype 33 TU (ASR) hardcopy terminal Digital VT05 video terminal Digital VT50 video terminal VT11 graphics co-processor GT42 display scope I am looking for parts sources for all of these components. Among other things, I need connectors and cables, a light pen for the GT42, several parts for the terminals (in fact, I'd like to find junk terminals to scrap for parts), and accessories for the plotter. Do you know of another `decgraphic' system? Do you know of _software_ for a `decgraphic' system? Also, I'd love to hear from you if you are interested in `antique' equipment. Please reply to me directly, as I am not on INFO-GRAPHICS, INFO-HAMS, INFO-RSTS, or INFO-TERMS. Ed McGuire Bitnet: McGuire@Grin2 Grinnell College ARPAnet: McGuire%Grin2.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU 515 236-2570 ------------------------------ Date: 22 April 87 18:03-PDT From: MAINT%POMONA.BITNET@wiscvm.wisc.edu Subject: BITNET mail follows Date: 19 Apr 1987 03:00:18-PDT From: Info-Graphics moderator Andy Cromarty Subject: Info-Graphics Digest Info-Graphics Digest Sun Apr 19 03:00:19 PDT 1987 - Send submissions to Info-Graphics@ADS.ARPA - Send requests for list membership to Info-Graphics-Request@ADS.ARPA Today's Topics: GETAFM Posted on net.sources -- print in fonts you never knew you had. PC graphics cards/standards/monitors Eye tracking devices and smooth movement 4/28 ACM SIGGRAPH/SIGBIG lecture on Vector and parallel processing SURFMODL 1.1 available ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: swatsun!greenber@seismo.CSS.GOV (Peter Greenberg) Subject: GETAFM Posted on net.sources -- print in fonts you never knew you had. Date: 13 Apr 87 05:10:13 GMT I wrote a program that gets Adobe Font Metrics (AFM) files from any PostScript device, and I have posted it to net.sources. I attempted posting this program some time ago but it was redirected to /dev/null at an upstream site, as was all outgoing news from Swarthmore College. You should check it out, and E-Mail me if it is useful to you. The last time I posted to net.sources, I also posted notices like this on mod.computers.laser-printers and, I believe, comp.graphics and I received several requests for the program, called getafm. I have fixed some bugs and now it works fine for teaching your computer to ptroff and enscript in fonts that you have on your PS device but have no AFM files for. -- Peter Greenberg, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA 19081 AT&T:(215) 328-8384 or 8610 UUCP: ...{{seismo | inhp4}!bpa | {sun | rutgers}!liberty}!swatsun!greenber ARPA: swatsun!greenber@bpa.BELL-ATL.COM ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 13 Apr 87 12:25 EDT From: Kevin Broekhoven Subject: PC graphics cards/standards/monitors I have just started looking at all these graphics cards for PC's (we have zeniths with IBM cards here at Queens) and am frankly getting quite confused about all the different standards (CGA, EGA, HERC, ...the new IBM standard) as well as what screen works with what (monochrome, high-res, ttl...) I have some vendor documentation but it's difficult to see the forest for the trees. Is there any article or reference out there that gives a clear, simple overview of the whole subject of graphics cards/standards/monitors? Please send any mail to me, I will forward a list of responses to this list. thanks in advance, Kevin Broekhoven Applications programmer (graphics) Computing and Communications Services Queens University K7L-3N6 (613) 545-2235 Mailnet, Bitnet, NetNorth: BROEKHVN at QUCDN ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 13 Apr 87 16:32:05 PST From: Jeffrey Mulligan Subject: Eye tracking devices and smooth movement pwha@tut.cc.rochester.edu (Bill Haake): > > > by an eye tracking device (interfaced to 11/73). It is most important that > "the movement" appear smooth, i.e. 1 pixel at a time and that the movement > can be synchronized with data collected from the eye tracker. We would > like to create the movement by hardware pan and scroll at one pixel > resolution, but color map animation techniques or double frame buffer > methods that can be performed For smooth movement you might want to consider vector plotting. I had a very nice system running off of an 11-23 that consisted of: A 3 board set from ADAC (Mass. company, check advertiser index in HARCOPY), consisting of DMA interface, a/d board, and expander board with 2 d/a's (part numbers 1023ad, 1023ex and 1620dma, I think). A programmable clock board, also from ADAC. A small plotting scope (Hewlett-Packard 1350 I think). We chose the ADAC boards because they were they only ones which offered DMA-driven DAC's. With DMA, we could plot points at about 10 usec /point. Animated displays consisting of ~512 points per frame could easily be displayed at 100 Hz, with higher refresh rates possible as the number of points was decreased. The DAC's were 12 bit, giving better positional resolution that a raster system without anti-aliasing. We also had a raster unit attached to this system: an AED 767. (Advanced Electronic Devices, Sunnyvale CA) 1K by 1K frame buffer, displaying 480 x 640 at 80 Hz (Yes, that's 80 not 60), interlaced. Price was about $7K back then, probably cheaper now. We had it driving a high quality monitor which cost another $7K itself. Hope this was some help. Jeff Mulligan (jbm@ames-aurora.arpa) NASA/Ames Research Ctr., Mail Stop 239-3, Moffet Field CA, 94035 (415) 694-5150 ------------------------------ From: Eugene Miya N. Date: 15 Apr 1987 1725-PST (Wednesday) Subject: 4/28 ACM SIGGRAPH/SIGBIG lecture on Vector and parallel processing [Of interest to those in or near the San Francisco Bay Area:] Bay Area ACM/SIGGRAPH and SIGBIG present: "A Quick Introduction to Vector and Parallel Processors for Graphics Programmers" Speaker: Richard Friedman Sr. Systems Analyst, Pacific-Sierra Research Do you believe in the Desktop Cray? Computer graphics is extremely compute intensive, hence frequent use of supercomputers. Many such features are finding their way into smaller mini-supercomputers, main frames, and now personal computers. In the not too distant future, we will see the day of the "Desktop Cray." The question is not "if" but "when?" We have invited our speaker to give us a glimpse into the future. Topic: Richard Friedman will give us a quick tour thru today's "supercomputers," along with the joys and difficulties of programming them for real applications. To utilize these machines both easy and radical changes in coding styles are required. He will address the questions: "What is vectorization?" "How do you program for parallel execution?" and "What about portability?" among others. About the Speaker: Mr. Friedman started working with state-of-the-art supercomputers (CDC 6600) in 1965 at the Courant Institue of New York Univ. From 1968 to 1981, he was in charge of programming languages and libraries (CDC 6600 and 7600) at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory of UC Berkeley. He spent 1977 at the European Weather Centre (ECMWF) in England which was one of the early Cray-1 sites. Since joining Pacific-Sierra Research, Mr. Friedman has created special applications software for the Cray and Cyber-205 systems and has been involved with development on Alliant, SCS, and other supercomputer systems. When Tuesday April 28, at 8 PM Where: Hewlett-Packard (The Oak Room) 19447 Pruneridge Ave., Cupertino, CA ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Apr 87 7:52:31 EST From: Kenneth Van Camp -FSAC- Subject: SURFMODL 1.1 available SURFMODL (surface/solids modeling program for the IBM PC and compatibles) version 1.1 is now available from Simtel-20. It is broken into two archives; the first contains the full source code (4000+ lines of Turbo Pascal code), documentation, and example data files. The second contains several different versions of the executable code to support the Hercules graphics board, CGA, EGA, Heath/Zenith Z-100, AT&T 6300, Sanyo MBC-55x, and IBM 3270. You will need the following two files: Filename Type Bytes CRC Directory PD: SURFMODL.ARC BINARY 234507 F713H SURFMVSN.ARC BINARY 346348 5759H --Ken Van Camp ------------------------------ End of INFO-GRAPHICS ******************** ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 23 Apr 87 15:26:42 est From: Mark Harris Subject: Digest How do I find out more about the eye-tracking devices mentioned in the ARPA Internet news broadcast ?? Mark Harris, UNC Chapel Hill ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 23 Apr 87 16:18 EDT From: Subject: graphics mailing list X-Original-To: info-graphics@ads.arpa, TAM I would like to be included on the graphics mailing list. Thank you, Paul Tam Medical College of Ohio TAM@MCOIARC (bitnet) ------------------------------ End of INFO-GRAPHICS ********************