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- The RabbitEars font is a round, bold '40's type of advertising display font
- whose letters slightly resemble Cooper Black. Uppercase and lowercase
- characters are identical in this font, except for B, H, F, K and L, which
- are far taller than the other characters, forming "rabbit ear" loops at the
- top (hence the name). All the characters look like lower-case characters.
- Also in the font is a complete set of numbers and punctuation.
-
- On a 300-dpi
- device, don't print at sizes smaller than 48 points. Because the rabbit-ear
- capitals are so relatively tall, the "tall" characters in this font (b, d,
- f, k, etc.) are only 40% of the actual font size and the "short" (a, c, e,
- m, n, etc.) characters only 22% - - which means printed characters are about
- half the font size chosen. Because the insides of looped characters (a, d,
- e, o, etc.) are small, these characters will fill in at smaller sizes.
-
- RabbitEars is copyright (c) 1992 by David Rakowski. All Rights Reserved.
-
- RabbitEars is shareware. If you like, use, keep or worship this font, please
- send a tax-deductible contribution of $4.49 to the Columbia University Music
- department (if your first or last name is hyphenated, send $3.49). Make your
- check out to Columbia University and send it to Cynthia Lemiesz, Music
- Department, 703 Dodge, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027. You may
- include a brief letter that omits all the consonants ("ea yia: o ae ou? I
- a ie...."). Your money helps pay for performances of music composed by
- Columbia University students.
-
- RabbitEars is a product of the legendary but
- fictional entity Insect Bytes. If you find you have no use for this font,
- you can always use it to better your television reception. Nyuk nyuk nyuk.
-