WinPlot 2.0 for Windows requires:

1.  Windows 3.1x, WFW 3.1x, Win95, or Windows NT
2.  4Mb DRAM (RAM) and the standard swapfile
3.  Mouse - essential for some operations

If you run out of memory, you have plenty of memory and all other 
applications are closed, then try freeing some conventional memory.  An
easy way to do this is by running memmaker, a MS-Dos program.  

Note: The CSERVE.ZIP file included with this distribution includes an 
address book for CompuServe's Information Manager.  This address book
contains 158 email addreesses of congressmen, and then some. This file
should be unzipped in your CSERVER\SUPPORT directory.  It will not overwrite
any of your files, unless you have some named congress.*.  To change
the address book to congress address book simply execute congress.bat, then
to change it back execute congress.bat again.  With windows, I use the 
congress.pif file in my CSERVE group, and all I need to do is double click
the pif file's icon to change it, and when I'm through double click it to
get my regular address book back.

Now, I leave you with a memo Tom Hanks wrote to congress, and I urge you
to help mankind and support NASA by letting your congressmen/women know 
that you do.

Enjoy!

Thomas:-)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: Tom Hanks Memo to Congress
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
July 25, 1995
     
Dear Members of Congress,
     
I believed in the importance of U.S. efforts in space long before I began 
work on the film  Apollo 13.
     
The efforts of the men and women who have dedicated so much of their lives 
to the space program have produced tangible results that have positively 
impacted our lives, and the lives of all human kind.  New technologies, 
scientific discoveries, environmental understandings, along with 
breakthroughs in consumer goods which have fueled the worldwide economic 
motor, have all been direct products of the American desire and wherewithal 
to go into space.
     
Along with these benefits, this desire has supplied something unique to our 
collective psyche - inspiration.  It is the best part of us all - the 
understanding that given time and money, we can figure out just about 
anything.  The American work ethic is most perfectly displayed in the plans 
and accomplishments of NASA and its contributing industries.  It is, in 
fact, inspiring to see that we can, and do, put men and women into the 
lifeless vacuum and glorious free fall of outer space.
     
Feats such as going to the moon, orbiting the earth for weeks at a time, or 
installing and repairing the instruments that expand our knowledge, are all 
celebrations of everything we Americans are supposed to be.  When we decide 
to do so, we solve problems.  We figure things out.  We go into space.
     
I know such concepts as a permanently manned orbiting science station and 
other NASA programs are not as glamorous as going to the moon.  And Lord 
knows that our problems here on our world need our attention, resolve and 
service.
     
But to choose not to go into space, to decide that our days of discovery and
     
     
conquest there are over, to cease or curtail funding for the one American 
program that exists solely to advance the horizon for all mankind would be, 
I
think, equal to limiting the grand power of pure inspiration, hampering our 
manifest destiny, and taking away the best part of all of us.
     
I hope you support full funding for our NASA programs to continue the 
inspiring concept of our human role in space.
     
Sincerely,
     
original signed by
     
Tom Hanks

