Word: cataloger
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...plenty. All this stuff for sale, more in heaven and earth than was dreamt of in even the maddest consumer's philosophy: buggy whips and barbering aids, covered wagons and canaries, tires and trousseaux, countless doodads that seemed unnecessary until they popped up on the page. From the Sears catalog, known affectionately as the "big book," customers could order everything necessary to equip a house: furniture, appliances, rugs, cooking and eating utensils and paint. Between 1908 and 1937, they could also order the house itself. All told, Sears sold 100,000 prefabricated models, and most of them are still standing...
...ranked low in user-friendliness. For most of its 97 years, the big book did not offer home-delivery service. People who wanted to purchase something listed could mail in their order but then had to journey to a place populous enough to sustain a Sears store or catalog center to pick it up. No use making a call. Only last year did 800-number operators start standing by, ready to take orders day and night; the big book, after all, was born when customers had no telephones. And such updated procedures, for all their added charms to the busy...
According to the course catalog, English Oyr will focus more on students' own work and less on history or Lee's movies, and enrollment will be limited to 15 students...
...Shone writes in the catalog, Sickert's career ran parallel to all the great Modernist movements from the 1880s to the 1930s but belonged to none of them. He was "a passionately self-isolating figure . . . highly individual, combining expected elements of the European mainstream with personal tastes that can appear willful or mandatory." He was also a witty and truthful art critic, whose essays and journalism, collected in 1947 by Osbert Sitwell under the title A Free House!, are never dull and often possess a Shavian energy. Courageous to the point of eccentricity, Sickert always followed his own nose...
...second floor of Widener, you see almost no one using the card catalog," said Kenneth E. Carpenter, assistant library director. "And if you do, it's usually someone with gray hair...young people don't use the cards...