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LESSON 9
210
Anchored Frames and Graphics
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to do the following:
•
Import graphics into anchored frames.
•
Anchor graphics below a paragraph, at the bottom of a column, in the page margin, in
a line of text, and run into a paragraph.
•
Copy and reuse anchored frames.
•
Create a drop cap.
Editing text containing anchored frames
Throughout this lesson, you’ll add graphics to a travel guide on Hawaii. To see the
different positions in which you can place graphics and how they move as you edit text,
you’ll begin by looking at the finished document.
1
If necessary, copy the Lesson09 folder from the
FrameMaker 7.0 Classroom in a Book
CD and start FrameMaker 7.0.
2
If FrameMaker 7.0 is not in standard mode, choose File > Preferences > General, and
then select FrameMaker from the Product Interface pop-up menu.
3
Open Finished.fm in the Lesson09 folder.
4
Use the Next Page button (
) and Previous Page button (
) in the status bar to page
through the document.
HAWAII
1
Kailua-Kona
Sights
Kohala Lava Desert Area
ack on Highway 19 heading
South, the large cluster of
palms towards the ocean at
the 79-mile marker sur-
round a large freshwater
pond and a pretty but secluded beach called
Ke-awa-iki. The pond itself is not available
to visitors (the barbed wire, half-starved
dobermans, and snipers with night-vision
glasses see to that), but the beach is acces-
sible via a 15 minute walk (See Ke-awa-iki
in Beaches.)
Take a look at the “graffiti” strewn about
the lava field. It’s sort of an island tradition
to compose messages from pieces of coral,
and families often come out here to do it
together. They’re almost always friendly
messages, like Al & Sandy, I Love You
Mom, or In Memory of Dan, and rarely
contain the nasties often seen in real main-
land graffiti.
The scenic turnout at the 82-mile marker
overlooks
Kiholo Bay
. Down there you
will find a saltwater bay with freshwater
calmly floating on top, lots of turtles, and a
lava tube with fresh spring water just a few
dozen feet from the ocean. Intrigued? I
hope so. You can drive there…maybe.
Access is a little unusual.
Throughout this part of the island you’ll
occasionally see palm trees along the bar-
ren coastline. These are almost always an
indication of freshwater spring-fed pools.
Since there’s no permanent stream on the
entire west side of the island, water perco-
lates into the lava and often bubbles to the
surface near the shore, forming pools. We
look for them when we’re hiking along the
coast. When you’re hot and tired, you can’t
beat splashing like a fool in a cold, clean
freshwater or brackish pool.
If you’re looking for a stunning secluded
beach and don’t mind walking for 15–20
minutes,
Makalawena Beach
(described in
Beaches) is west of the 89-mile marker.
There’s a small herd of wild donkeys
that crosses the highway at night and early
mornings on the older lava north of the 85-
mile marker. (You’ll see warning signs
posted but for some reason the donkeys just
ignore them.) They come down out of the
mountains to lick the salt off rocks by the
shore, drink from springs, and occasionally
putt on the Hualalai Golf Course. (Now
there’s a hazard.) Known locally as Kona
Nightingales, they are the descendants of
B