\documentclass[dvips]{article} \usepackage{graphicx}then include the postscript file using the following commands
\begin{figure}[htbp] \includegraphics{yourfile.ps} \end{figure}LATEX can cope with compressed postscript files too, but since latex can't read the BoundingBox line from the compressed file, you need to provide it. If your compressed file's called yourfile.ps.gz, copy the BoundingBox line into a file called yourfile.ps.bb. Then the following works
\begin{figure}[htbp] \includegraphics{yourfile.ps.gz} \end{figure}
Just about all of the following facilities use postscript. You'll need to run latex to generate `foo.dvi'. This file can be viewed by the latest xdvi program, which can cope with embedded postscript. Run dvips -o foo.ps foo.dvi to convert the resulting DVI/postscript file to pure postscript. This will produce a file that can be previewed with ghostview or gs. On the teaching system this file can be printed out using plotview or
lp -dljmr1 -opostscript foo.ps
See the Creating and Printing graphics on PC, Mac, SUN and HP machines and Xfig handouts for more details.