That's the title of a Web site by David J. Perry.

Among other good things, he has a document explaining fonts:

"Information about fonts and font-related issues

All about fonts

I have put most of what I have learned about fonts, keyboards, and related
issues into a booklet titled Word Processing in Classical Languages:
Latin, Germanic, Greek. This booklet provides information about standard
256-character fonts as well as information about Unicode and how this will
help scholars use a larger repertoire of characters, along with much other
information. It is written to be accessible to those who don't have
extensive knowledge of font issues, but also contains material that will
be of interest to those who are experienced in this area."

Go to <http://scholarsfonts.net/index.html> and scroll down about 40% for
more comments and links to the booklet in two different formats, PDF and
MS Word 97.

[His Font]
He also has a large Unicode font (about 1 MB as a .zip file), called
Cardo, for scholars of the aforementioned languages, as well as some other
useful things.

Regards,

--
Nicholas Bodley /*|*\ Waltham, Mass. (Not "MA")
The curious hermit -- autodidact and polymath
Greetings from the Great Northeastern Rain Forest!
Our Water Table Restoration seems to have been successful.
Happiness is a full Quabbin (Big reservoir).