This Debian prepackaged version of Jigsaw was put together by me,
Charles Briscoe-Smith <cpbs@debian.org>, using a story file obtained
from <URL:ftp://ftp.gmd.de/if-archive/games/infocom/Jigsaw.z8>.

  JIGSAW
  An Interactive History
  Copyright (c) 1995 by Graham Nelson
  Release 3 / Serial number 951129 / Inform v1600 Library 6/1

  Jigsaw is copyright (c) Graham Nelson 1995, but may be freely
  distributed and used provided no profit is involved and provided
  it is not modified in any way.  No trade marks are (knowingly)
  used. Resemblance to real places is intentional, and on rare occasions
  real historical figures appear, but those still alive have only
  walk-on parts.

  The author was born in Chelmsford, Essex, in 1968, and teaches pure
  mathematics at Oxford University, where his doctoral research was in
  gauge theory and low- dimensional differential geometry. His first
  game was "Curses" (1993), which must by now have irritated thousands of
  people to a greater or lesser extent; how many, nobody can say. (Though
  almost certainly fewer than the number who have found and pressed the
  "Great Big Button That Doesn't Do Anything" on the World Wide Web,
  which tells us a lot about the Internet, or democracy, or something
  like that.)  "Jigsaw" is his second game. He devoutly hopes it contains
  fewer bugs.

  Play-tested by Michael Kinyon and Gareth Rees

  With stray pieces found by: Torbjorn Andersson, Jools Arnold, Edward
  Arnowitz, Doug Atkinson, Andrew Benham, Martin Braun, Mike Carletta,
  Casper Kvan Clausen, Evan Day, Audrey DeLisle, Robert M. Dickau,
  Paul David Doherty, Jon Drukman, Jason Dyer, Stephen Van Egmond,
  C. E. Forman, Joe Frank, Marc G.  Frank, Chris Goedde, Bruce Goldstein,
  Mark Green, Bjorn Gustavsson, John Holder, Carl Huben, Sam Hulick, Hakan
  Huss, Heidi Kirsch, Candy Krepel, Jeremy Lakatos, Mike Leigh, Teo Kwang
  Liak, Jim MacBrayne, Carl de Marcken, Chris Markwyn, David McGrath,
  Todd McNoldy, Bonni Mierzejewska, Carrie O'Grady, Andrew Plotkin,
  Guiliano Procida, Neil Querengesser, Luke Roberts, Kathleen Rudden,
  Matthias Ruhl, Alison Ruxton, Alison Scott, Paul Shrimpton, David
  A. Sinclair, Petter Sjoelund, Suzanne Skinner, Tom Spindler, Jon-Paul
  Therriault, Paul Trauth, Richard Tucker, Jenn Vesperman and Dancer,
  Mikko Vuorinen, Jacob Solomon Weinstein, Eliot Williams and Jeff Zahn.

  Thanks also to Martin Braun, ein Berliner; to the Gustavssons, for
  their Russian-Swedish Swedish-Russian dictionary; to Kevin Bracey, for
  his fine Archimedes interpreter; to Volker Blasius and Robert Pelak,
  for helping distribute the game; to Gareth Rees, il miglior fabbro;
  and to the courteous and helpful staff of the Oxford County Library.
