Virtual font files for use with WNCY* fonts: These virtual font files are provided in response to requests from users in the TeX community. The encoding and ligatures included in the University of Washington Cyrillic (WNCY) fonts were designed to support the transliteration scheme used for keying Mathematical Reviews (MR). The ligatures prevent proper hyphenation when the fonts are used in cyrillic text, and the encoding is not compatible with other existing encodings for keying Russian text. The enclosed virtual font files eliminate the ligatures whose purpose was to enable MR transliteration, while retaining the kerning information, and also provide alternate encodings to allow direct keying of Russian text. One set of virtual fonts uses the name WLCY*. This set does not re-encode the characters in the fonts. It simply removes the ligatures which prevent correct hyphenation of Russian text. The other two sets of virtual fonts re-encode the characters to conform to the other existing Cyrillic encoding conventions. The two most common encodings are KOI-8 and Alternativnyj Variant (AV), and we have included files to generate virtual fonts remapping the WNCY fonts to each of these encodings. Both KOI-8 and AV encodings map the Cyrillic characters into the upper 128 character locations of the 356-character font. In non-TeX environments, the Cyrillic characters are commonly accessed by turning on the eighth bit for input from the keyboard, thus allowing keying of Roman or Cyrillic characters from the same keyboard. In these virtual fonts, we have imitated this convention by mapping the standard CM characters to the lower 128 locations and some of the WNCY characters to the upper 128 locations in the virtual fonts. The files for KOI-8 encoding are called WKCY*, and those for AV encoding are called WVCY*. These virtual font files are provided as is without any macro support, as the AMS does not use the alternative encodings in-house and does not have the expertise in-house to do an adequate job of providing such macro support. If volunteers in the user community can provide such macro support (e.g. a LaTeX package) and wish to contribute their work to the AMSFonts distribution we would of course be glad to incorporate it, to make it more easily available to other users. Similarly, support for (system-dependent) conveniences like keyboard remapping for typing Russian is beyond the resources of the AMS and must be obtained elsewhere. It is also assumed that the user understands about the use of virtual fonts in TeX. Those who wish to use these virtual fonts but are unfamiliar with the use of virtual fonts in TeX are referred to the documentation for their own local implementation of TeX. Any current implementation of TeX is capable of using virtual fonts, and includes documentation for their use. A complete description of virutal fonts by Donald Knuth is available in TUGBoat, the journal of the TeX Users Group, Volume 11, No. 1, pages 13-23. For this initial release, we provide only the 10-point virtual font for each font family. These will serve the needs of the majority of users, and we shall develop and release the remaining sizes in the near future.