Word: manual
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...story-songs-which their best ones are-the narrator is Willie Johnson, who always wanted to be a preacher. When the time comes for Baritone Johnson to narrate, the quartet rhythmically deploys, slapping and tapping the while, closes ranks after he steps up to the microphone. Besides their manual and pedal percussion effects, the Golden Gate Quartet beat out the rhythm by precisely controlling the intake and outgo of their breaths. Their most popular songs are Samson, Noah, Job, Jonah, Joshua Fit de Battle ob Jericho, and a secular number-The Preacher and the Bear-with an old snapper...
...trailless land. Commanding officers slaved at newfangled exercises, learning to use radio and motorcycle communication, use also the squadron of reconnaissance tanks which will be part of each new cavalry division. On the chill, white expanse of the drill ground or in the dank corrals, recruits learned the manual of arms, the ways of horses, impressed their officers with their "remarkable intensity and enthusiasm." Machine-gunners and artillerymen practiced firing at wheeled targets, cavorting down a winding, miniature railway...
...education. For many, lessons will be based on a new textbook, a 344-page, brown-covered book, replete with illustrations, maps, prose, all of which tell wearers of blue-corded infantry hats about new tricks they will have to learn, old tricks to be forgotten. The book : Infantry Field Manual FM 7-5. The editor: No. 1 U. S. foot soldier, hand some, white-haired Major General George Arthur Lynch...
...Observers will operate largely on their bellies, peer around the right (not left) side of trees, rocks, fence posts. Reason: Right-handed observers must be ready to shoot from their right shoulder. The Army tries to turn lefties into righties. The Lynch manual makes no provision for lefties...
When a man starts worrying about his heart, he must literally put himself in his doctor's hands. For the diagnosis of heart disease still depends as much on a doctor's manual skill as on his instruments. The doctor feels a patient's pulse, listens to the rhythm of his heartbeat, estimates his blood pressure, measures his heart through X-ray pictures, and records on a graph the electric currents which result from its contraction...