Word: indexers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...index at the bottom of the page lists, by academic major, those programs requiring specific skill or educational background...
...your major subject is not listed in the index, refer to the sections describing the areas of the world in which you wish to work...
Excused after 6½ withering hours, Taylor still looked morning-fresh. As he gathered up the neatly arranged pencils and index cards in front of him, a reporter asked Fulbright if he had got any satisfaction out of Taylor's testimony. The Senator's reply was, for a change, to the point...
...size. His biceps are as big as a shotputter's, and his fist looks like the business end of a sledge hammer. His fingers, whose tips are cushioned from years of "cleaning the piano's teeth," are spatula-shaped; the all-important little finger is as long as the index finger, which is just a shade shorter than the middle finger. Thus, with the extension of his long thumbs, he can encompass a twelve-note spread on the keyboard. Most pianists are happy if they can handle a tenth...
...kept on running, and he never stopped jumping the competition. He was too tiny-5 ft. 3 in.-to compete physically, so he decided to lead with his right: he became a stenographer. The day before he was to compete in a worldwide shorthand contest, he broke an index finger. He worked his way around the injury by jamming his pen through a potato, then took dictation while holding the potato. At the age of 18, he was pronounced, potato and all, the best stenographer alive. Bernard Baruch took him on as a personal secretary, and William Rosenberg...