In response to Jim Zwick's inquiry: I teach most of my classes in a multimedia classroom that gives the capability to project images from an IBM-compatible computer onto a screen. Thus, I can use the Twain bio on Twain's World as a filmstrip, other photos as additional audiovisual aids, the timeline as an outline of Twain's life and career, the Edison movie as the best audiovisual of all, the ridiculous animations of the jumping frog and Huck-and-Jim-on-the-raft for comic relief, and electronic text as text for display and discussion. In using the electronic text, though, I'm more likely to copy it out of Twain's World into the Presentations program (Perfect Office) or Powerpoint (Microsoft Office), either of which displays it more effectively. --Jim Leonard