Regarding the 1940s high school yearbook article I mentioned: I think it
was 1942 - so the war was still hot. The two boys dropped the typing class
since they had signed up for the Service and had other training
commitments. On the next page was a list of those who had recently signed
up, along with a list of recent graduates who had already been KIA (and on
which front it was - Pacific vs Eastern).
I'll try to remember next time I'm back home, to get a photocopy of that
article - maybe post it at the CHM forum as an interesting reminder about
the past. I remember chuckling that the 20wpm wasn't too much to be proud
of. But, do have to consider the context: they probably didn't have
typewriters at home, not sure how the requested content to type was
presented (projected onto a wall or on a lettersheet next to them?), and
what equipment they had.
And just had a thought: if we could find 20-30 working condition type
writers today, I wonder how modern high school students would do in a
"typing contest" in that equipment -- would they type too fast and jam the
things up, ruining both their accuracy and wpm average? :) Hmmm!
On Thu, Jan 26, 2023 at 10:15 PM Fred Cisin via cctalk <
cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
It seems as though MOST of us chose the typing class
elective.
Disproportionately more than the general population.
We also probably don't have very many athletes here. Although lugging
this shit around does build up some strength.
--
Grumpy Ol' Fred cisin(a)xenosoft.com