Outlines & Layouts

As Patentee Kahler sat in the freshman College Success course, in his junior year, in one of the most “chill” University regions of California, he knew his outlines on the covered topics were going to be distributed to students for his Professor. His professor pulled him aside, and professed “Your notes don’t need to be so perfect.” Finding greater efficiency for social time & studying through the need of less rewriting his notes, Patentee Kahler, 2 years later, patented his design.
One of the worst aspects in taking notes and drawing layouts, he found, was the gravitational pull of the ordinal phereitel™ (margin line). Note symmetry took on a non-covex polygon shape more than a pixelated image recognizable in Roman Typography. Without organization, supporting ideas became details, and details became main ideas – the paper wambled important discoveries intended for scholarly intercourse.
The pill was simple – a phereitel™ to support the frayed ends of ideas, and fortify studying with achievement.
Writing an Outline, and designing a layout has never been more simple. The Century Update™ brings one of California’s Department of Education’s recognized students, awarded in the written language, to all American People.

To Write an Outline:
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- Select the Phereitel™ [Gr. pherein, to support + telos, end]
- Each Phereitel™ (longitudinal line) supports the topics along the line
- To provide greater detail on the topic, move to the succeeding assembly™, indent to the next phereitel™ and proceed
- Each Phereitel™ (longitudinal line) supports the topics along the line
- Select the Phereitel™ [Gr. pherein, to support + telos, end]
To Create a Layout
The Century Update™ is prescribed with a natural geometric layout called knots™ – meaning there is a traceable convex grid easy to orient and navigate. The knots™, formed by an intersecting Phereitel™, syls™ and an assembly’s™ constitutions™ create the perfect longitudinal line for organizing charts, graphics, and structure to your writing – just as found, in the layout feature, on your word processor. Further, Vocht Canon Ruling™ (VCR) is measured in Pica Typography – a turn of the century American measurement system – providing for tantamount ruled sizes equivalent to normal leading of the Font Point Size found in your word processor. Take business on top of mountains knowing your writings are a manuscript replica of your “Tell-All” production.
The Layout:
- Zone the PRS™ into parcels using the Phereitels™ and Assemblies™. Each zoned parcel will contain images, text, or charts for your layout
- Choose the VCR™ (Free VCR™ Assessment) that best aligns with your presentation. Larger presentations, with more details per page (talent™), will require a smaller VCR™ such as 1 Pica (12 Pts.). If your creating a layout for your Elementary School Science Fair, or a storyboard for a High School Graphic Arts class, then a larger VCR™ will be sufficient.
- After the PRS™ has been zoned, add your content, either aligning or justifying the script
- The layout is complete, and ready to present to an assembly in the proper Freedom of Speech

Alignments and Justification
Phereitels™ are useful prescriptions for helping the layout with alignments of words and writing, etc. Center headings, write on the horzain™ side (left), or forain™ side (right) of the paper, or even make greater use of an image/chart by justifying the written paragraph using the Phereitels™.
Align
The Constitutions™ and Canons™ are the perfect lines for creating leveled letters. “My Viceroy Phereitel™ (MVP),” a version of the PRS™ for children, has a dotted line through the center of the vocht™ to ensure leveled imprints of lower case characters of the alphabet. The dotted line is not a regular feature on the PRS™, however, Tri-Color Editions and/or a smaller VCR™ may be used to write leveled lower capital letters.
Alignments orient the talent™ for readers, opening and closing valuable blank spaces. Alignments create agreements, build uniformity, and effective cooperation to the end. We use alignments to prevent vehicles from wasting valuable tire resources, and to keep vehicles from swerving on the roads. We use alignments to navigate celestial night skies, nautical territories, decorating rooms, and we use alignments to assist readers with new paragraphs, new columns, and new things to see on the talent™.
Justify
Justification is the attempt in freeing of oneself from the blame of speech caused by translation or interpretation. Justification is primarily used by Legal Assemblies, and Scholarly Assemblies to provide the good or lawful grounds for which their interpretation of free speech is to be right, declared guiltless, or free of warrant and privileged to being published for the Public Dominion. The Media Assembly often uses justification in their columns, and articles to show there is fact and reason, and to give vindication that their assembly’s freedom of speech is not a meaningless abuse of their rights. Justified writing assumes there is no penalty of sin in a Freedom of written speech, as justified art assumes there is no penalty of debate.
To Align (right, left)
- Select any Phereitel™ you want to start your script.
- Use the Phereitel™ to act as your Ordinal Phereitel™ (margin) as you move to the succeeding assembly™ (line), always starting at the Phereitel™ in succession.
- Center words by building on equal sides of the phereitel™
- knowing the number of letters in a word will assist in distributing the word evenly amongst the Centering Phereitel™
To Align Capitals™ (Headings), titles, etc with the Talent™.
- Find the stenoy™ – the center syl™ in the middle of the talent™
- Estimate the size of words between two phereitels™ of your capital™/title
- maintain the stenoy™ in the middle.
- Write the Script
To Justify the Script
- Select 2 phereitels™ to be the starting point and stopping point
- Start writing at the Start Phereitel™, and stop writing at the Stop Phereitel™
- hyphenate words in the appropriate syllable
- add space between letters to ensure the word/sentence is completely justified
Phone
(315) 530-0561
VISIT
9am to 7pm
Mon–Fri
Need Help?
Address
P.O. Box 455, Theresa, New York 13691