\vspace*{1cm} \title{Snippets} \author{} \begin{article} \section{\TeX\ consultant sought} The Wellcome Trust is interested to hear from \TeX\ experts who would be willing and able to provide technical support and consultancy to one user on an ad-hoc basis. The project concerned aims to catalogue several hundred Arabic manuscripts and software used at the moment is MS Word, em\TeX, emTeXgi and Arab\TeX\ under MS Windows 3.11. This tool-set might change with an imminent move to Windows NT4 or could be changed if recommended. It is foreseen that there will be telephone inquiries as well as on-site visits. Interested parties should apply to The Wellcome Trust by submitting a resume of their relevant technical experience, details of other commitments and expected payment mode. To find out more about the project, please e-mail Dr Nikolai Serikoff (\url{n.serikoff@wellcome.ac.uk}) , to apply please send the requested information to Ms Dagmar Jeschin (\url{d.jeschin@wellcome.ac.uk} or Dagmar Jeschin, The Wellcome Trust, 210 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE) by the middle of August. \section{Committee members sought: a message from Philip Taylor} Having now served as Chairman of \uktug\ for about nine months, I can without hesitation confirm that it is both an incredibly rewarding yet frequently frustrating experience. Rewarding, because at first hand I get to see how hard the various members of the Committee work to make \uktug\ a better organisation; frustrating, because I see how much time gets wasted on the minutiae of committee work. Yet despite the frustrations, work gets done: \BV\ is edited, formatted, printed and distributed; new editions of the \TeX\ Live CD are prepared, pressed and sent out; and meetings and workshops are researched, planned, organised and announced. But who does this work, and why? The answer is `the members of the Committee' (aided and abetted by willing volunteers such as Martyn Johnson of the Cambridge Computer Laboratory). And why? Only they can tell you! It's hard work, and the only reward is an occasional letter from a member expressing his or her thanks for the work which has been done. But each year, a number of the Committee have to stand down. Some because they have served their time, and our Constitution (blessed be its name) ensures that no Committee member may serve more than his or her allotted time without standing down for at least one year. Some because pressure of `real' work prevents them from spending the time on \uktug\ activities that such activities demand. And who is to replace them? That, dear Member, is where you come in! Do you care about \TeX? Do you care about \uktug? Do you have the energy to attend some four to six meeting a year, and to receive some two thousand or more electronic mail messages a year (and to send about 1/12 of that number yourself?). If you do, then this is the time to step forwards. A number of the present Committee will be standing down or retiring at the Annual General Meeting in September, and the remaining members of the Committee are very concerned to ensure that those leaving are replaced. If you are willing to stand, then \emph{please} complete one of the nomination forms which accompanies this issue of \BV. Beg (on your bended knees, if necessary) two people to propose and second you. And canvass all your friends in \uktug\ to vote for you, because this is going to be the hardest fought election in the history of \uktug! Do all this, and I look forward \emph{very much} to seeing you on the Committee next year. \end{article} \title{Introduction to \Lftrou} \author{Malcolm Clark} \begin{article} I started my \TeX-life with `plain' \TeX\ in about 1984. Being younger and more set in my ways, I truly believed that \LaTeX\ was an affront to family values and represented yet another downward step in the sorry decline of moral and ethical values. If not actually the spawn of the devil, \LaTeX\ users were at least beyond the pale. This view managed to sustain me for many years, until in 1989 Katherine Butterfield persuaded me to teach \LaTeX\ to a research group at the University of California, Berkeley. \textit{\Lftrou} (or \textit{\LaTeX$^\prime$} as it was then) was born. At first I thought (quite arrogantly) that I could merely adapt my existing \TeX\ course to \LaTeX. \LaTeX\ requires a much more subtle and mellow thought process. Unlike \TeX, where you really can do exactly what you want (whether or not it is a good idea), \LaTeX\ requires that you relax and go with the flow. Trust it, and all will be well: remember \LaTeX\ can smell your fear. Looking back, I have to say that the average dedicated \LaTeX-er is a much less stressed individual than the average dedicated \TeX-er. When I published my \textit{\TeX\ Primer} in 1992, I planned to follow it shortly after by \Lftrou. I was overtaken by the euphoria of \LaTeX3, which eventually became the muted excitement of \LaTeXe, and had to start re-writing whole chunks. At the same sort of time, some excellent \LaTeX\ books, like Goossens, Mittelbach \& Samarin's \textit{\LaTeX\ Companion}, Kopka \& Daly's second edition of their \textit{Guide to \LaTeXe}, Goossens, Rahtz \& Mittelbach's \textit{\LaTeX\ Graphics Companion}, and then the second edition of Lamport's own \textit{\LaTeX: A Document Preparation System} appeared on the scene. We were awash with good quality stuff (at last!). My enthusiasm for the project waned, but it was revitalised by the last course I taught, at the Technical University of Malaysia, where I had one of the biggest and best classes I have ever had the pleasure to teach. They helped me get things pretty close to their present state. We are presenting this as a serialisation, though perhaps not quite in the same long and honourable tradition which includes Hardy and Dickens. What is in your hands represents about the first quarter of the text. The next quarter will be out later this year (we are aiming for \BV\ 8.5), and the other half should appear next year sometime, although precise dates and editions for 1999 are but figments of our collective imagination (neither the present editor nor myself are likely to be on the UK TUG committee next year, and our loyalty could be stretched\dots). There are also questions embedded in the text. Once all the text has been finished, solutions to these questions will be provided. This probably means yet another chunk of \BV, but since I haven't yet written the solutions, I don't know quite how much space they will take up. All being well, and if our enthusiasm stands up, we're very tempted to create a pdf (Adobe Acrobat) version with tons of hyper-links. That would be available electronically (and maybe even as part of one of these magnificent \TeX\ Live CDs that Sebastian Rahtz keeps producing). I love the idea of a hyper-\LaTeX\ electronic book. The \LaTeX\ source will of course go up as part of the \BV\ archive files on \CTAN, where anyone may obtain it for their own pleasure and delectation. The UK \TeX\ Users Group will hold copyright. If anyone wishes to use the text of \textit{\Lftrou}, in part, or entire, they are welcome to do so. I merely ask that they should acknowledge me as the `original' source, but if they make any commercial advantage they should arrange with the UK \TeX\ Users Group to make any appropriate royalty payment. I'd really prefer they gave it away. In spirit I would like to be fairly close to the GNU copyleft declaration. But I'm not against crass commercialism: I'm just against someone else making loads of money out of my efforts, and \TeX\ not benefiting in some way. There are too many people to thank to be able to do so individually, but I will always be grateful to Katherine Butterfield who provided the initial impetus. I gratefully acknowledge the many students from Santa Barbara to Johor Bahru who have been exposed to versions of the \LaTeX\ courses I have given, and who have therefore unwittingly contributed to this project. I am especially privileged to have Sebastian Rahtz as editor, and David Carlisle as reviewer. There will likely be errors in the text. I expect them to be errors of fact, omission, opinion or interpretation. I would be happy to hear of them, but except for errors of fact, I may choose to ignore them. Don't be surprised if I appear to lie or mislead in the initial chapters. This trait has a long and honorable tradition in books on \TeX. Sometimes the truth takes a little longer to tease out. I've never believed that it was appropriate to tell all the truth in all circumstances. You won't find details of how to install \TeX\ and \LaTeX\ in \textit{\Lftrou}. This is quite deliberate since I believe it to be a non-problem, especially for members of this group, who all have a copy of the \TeX\ Live CD. \end{article}