What should this site look like?

If you would like to check whether this site appears correctly, take a look at this picture.

Note the font styles, including the italics. Assuming that you are using a graphical browser rather than a text-only one, does what you see when you look at the site look like the picture?

If not, you may be missing one or more of the fonts. There are two, a serif one, used in the main body, and a sans-serif one, used mainly in the sidebar.

The main body font is Palatino by Hermann Zapf. We look for it under any of the following names:

  • Palatino Linotype, Palatino LT, Palatino LT Std, or Palatino LT Pro. This recent version by Linotype is included with Windows 2000 and XP, and also available from Linotype, Adobe, and possibly others.
  • Palatino. Included with Mac OS 9 and earlier, and otherwise sold by a variety of vendors. (Unfortunately it is not part of the basic Mac OS X installation, but it is included if you install Classic or iWork.)
  • URW Palladio L or Palladio, and Zapf Calligraphic 801 or Zapf Calligraphic. These "clones", from URW++ and Bitstream respectively, were explicitly authorized by the designer.
  • Book Antiqua or Z-Antiqua. An unauthorized clone distributed by Microsoft with various versions of Windows, Office, and other products.

URW++ graciously made their version available for free as part of the Ghostscript project. If you do not have Palatino otherwise available on your system, you might find one of the following useful: palladio−otf.zip (OpenType format, for OS X and Windows 2000 or newer), palladio−win.zip (Windows Type 1 format, for Windows 95, 98, or ME – requires Adobe Type Manager or ATM Light), or palladio−pfa.tgz (Type 1 ASCII format, for some Linux/Unix and other systems).

The sans-serif font in the sidebar is Verdana by Matthew Carter. Formerly part of Microsoft's Web core fonts, this font is included with all recent versions of Windows and OS X.

Its original license terms permit it to be redistributed, so although Microsoft itself no longer makes it available, you can still legally download verdan32.exe for Windows or Verdana.sit for Macintosh. Linux users and others might look here; some assembly may be required.

If you need any help getting this site to look right, email us, giving full information about your system and browser.