tailieunhanh - PEOPLE OF AFRICA

If you discover any errors in this Etext, please report them to me by E-mail. If you're reporting a discrepancy between the Etext and a modern edition, please include a complete citation of your source. Upon close examination, most editions contain minor errors and discrepancies which I've tried to correct in this Etext. These Etexts are part of the intellectual heritage we share as humans--please help to make them _perfectly embody_ the authors' legacies to the thousands of generations and billions of readers whose lives they will enrich. . | PEOPLE OF AFRICA Etext Production Notes This public domain Etext edition of Edith A. How s People of Africa was prepared by John Walker http . ch If you discover any errors in this Etext please report them to me by E-mail. If you re reporting a discrepancy between the Etext and a modern edition please include a complete citation of your source. Upon close examination most editions contain minor errors and discrepancies which I ve tried to correct in this Etext. These Etexts are part of the intellectual heritage we share as humans--please help to make them _perfectly embody_ the authors legacies to the thousands of generations and billions of readers whose lives they will enrich. Beautifully Typeset Etexts Free Plain Vanilla Etexts don t have to be austere and typographically uninviting. Most literature as opposed to scientific publications for example is typographically simple and can be rendered beautifully into type without encoding it into proprietary word processor file formats or impenetrable markup languages. This Etext is encoded in a form which permits it to be both read directly Plain Vanilla and typeset in a form virtually indistinguishable from printed editions of the work. To create typographically friendly Etexts I adhere to the following rules 1. Characters follow the 8-bit ISO 8859 1 Latin-1 character set. ASCII is a proper subset of this character set so any Plain ASCII file meets ths criterion by definition. The extension to ISO 8859 1 is required so that Etexts which include the accented characters used by Western European languages may continue to be readable by both humans and computers . 2. No white space characters other than blanks and line separators are used in particular tabs are expanded to spaces . 3. The text bracket sequence appears both before and after the actual body of the Etext. This allows including an arbitrary prologue and epilogue to the body of the document. 4. Normal body text begins in column 1 and is set .