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 li ke, use, keep or wor ship 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 Colum bia 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.
