\centerline{\bf Leslie's friend says\dots} \medskip \noindent I agree entirely with Leslie Lamport on the relative ease of changing the handful of parameters in \LaTeX\ which affect the overall page layout. It is one of the most staightforward changes to a style file. It is also one of the few which is clearly and reasonably comprehensively explained in the manual: one warning is, however, needed here --- anything you read about the parameter |\footheight| is probably false --- the truth, as Leslie admits in the January 88 version of the macros, is that |\footheight| is never (!!!) used, although it is religiously defined in every style file. As far as I know, no correction to the manual has been issued on this one. I also agree with him that, like so many things in the typographic world, making it easy means that it is easy to produce ``execrable'' results. So either get yourself a designer you like and can understand, or, and this is quite feasible for this type of design change, find a similar document which has been professionally designed (NB: for the same type and size of font) and which you like, \dots\ and copy it! The people/person I disagree with is whoever was the ``professional'' who produced the designs for the standard Latex styles: I, and my ``professional advisers'' find them execrablissimo(mi?). Modesty does not forbid me to add that if you want a large source of well-designed (well, professionally designed) A4 format publications on a variety of topics and a in a wealth of different typographic styles, then you need look no further than the enormous output of the Open University over the last 19 years (help, if the OU is that old, I must be due for retirement soon). \smallskip \rightline{\sl Chris Rowley} \smallskip \leftline{\sl Another editor's note:} \noindent Although I have been unable to trace any reference from LL which gives a clue to who might be responsible for the styles, he does credit Marshall Hendrichs, Lynne Ruggles and Richard Southall for ``what little I know about typography''. In a recent \TeXhax\ he fingered Hendrichs as contributing to the design of the \LaTeX\ book.