\documentstyle[cl]{article}\title{Your Title Here}\author{John~B.~Lowe{\tt xxx@xxx.berkeley.edu}Department of Linguistics \\University of California \\Berkeley, CA 94720}\begin{document}\maketitle\begin{abstract}The number and arrangement of abstracts is not to bebelieved. They can be long or short, concise or nonsensical.  Yours goes here.\end{abstract}\section{First section}The research presented here is  {\it very very cool}.\bigskipConsider the following data:\begin{quote}(1) Do zebras wear underwear.\end{quote}There are several interesting points to note about this sentence:\begin{itemize}\item it really doesn'tmake much sense;\item it's short; and\item it mentions {\bf zebras}.\end{itemize}And here is a figure...\begin{figure}[htb]more and more gobbledy gook.\caption{A caption for the figure.}\label{figure1}\end{figure}\section{Making a table}This is kind of a hassle. Here's a really basic one:\end{document}\endinput
