    
    SCREENPLAY STYLER 3.0a FOR MICROSOFT WORD 6.0 or 7.0
                      by Justin James
----------------------------------------------------------------

 Please immediately copy the files SCREENPL.DOT and SCREENPL.HLP 
 to the TEMPLATE directory of your Microsoft WORD program.
 This directory usually is...

            C:\winword\template
 or...	    C:\msoffice\templates

 which really means to exactly the same Word directory that 
 already contains your standard template called NORMAL.DOT, 
 wherever that file exists on your computer.

 You may then open any of the several .DOC files included in 
 this Shareware download.

 Further instructions about using this program are in the online 
 Windows HELP file called SCREENPL.HLP. (Or it can be opened, if
 needed, by double-clicking on it right now.)  
 Please do read and/or print it as soon as possible!

 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
			IMPORTANT

   NEW FEATURES IN THIS VERSION:

 1. Automatically creates a Title Page for your screenplay
    whenever you wish.

 2. A snappy dialog box opens for quick entry of Parentheticals.
    (Starts from Custom Toolbar only.)

 3. Changes the built-in color-coding of script page elements
    to all-black text for drafting and printing.

 4. A revised online Windows HELP file is available directly
    within Microsoft WORD.

 5. New VIEW ZOOM button on the Toolbar (a handy restoration of
    a feature from Microsoft WORD 2.0).

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
      ENJOY THIS FOR 30 DAYS AND THEN PLEASE REGISTER!
 This is a fully-functional Shareware version of SCREENPLAY
 STYLER, but it does not include the 50-page "Screenwriter's
 Formatting Bible" that comes to you with its modest
 registration fee. See REGISTER.DOC. The ability to number the
 scenes of your script also comes with the registered diskette.
 At the moment, that command is disabled in this version.
 [NOTE: Scene Numbers are not required when you submit a first
 draft of a screenplay to outside agencies or other interested
 parties, but they come in very handy even during rough-drafting
 and are absolutely required during production.)

