Published Articles


FROM THE ARENA
Column for Anchorage Times for Sunday, 22 April 1990
by WAYNE ANTHONY ROSS

I was born and raised in Milwaukee. Milwaukee was the city where the typewriter was invented around the time of the Civil War. Even so, I was a sophomore or junior in high school before I learned to type.

If I recall, my teacher's name was Mr. Witte. His name rhymed with Walter Mitty, a character from fiction who, at that time, was

" being played on television by an actor named Wally Cox. Mr. Witte

looked just like Wally Cox, and acted just like Walter Mitty, on Walter Mitty's off days. He was short, not very macho, and so the kids in my class could get away with anything in Typing 101.

In those days, nobody knew anything about word processors or j computers. Indeed, in my school, nobody even seemed to know much about typewriters. I still firmly believe that my school Had I purchased its typewriters from the original inventor, or perhaps from Civil War surplus, because, even now, when I occasionally see an antique typewriter for sale, invariably it is a much newer model than the ones we learned on. In fact, once I graduated from my high school, I never again saw typewriters like the ones we had in school.

The typewriters we used had little glass windows in the sides of them. We surmised that these windows were installed because typewriters were such a new invention when our typewriters were made, that people wanted to see how they worked. To do that, all you had to do was press a key, while watching through the little windows, and you could observe everything moving inside. We used to look in the little windows of our typewriters often. It was much more interesting than listening to Mr. Witte.

Somehow though, we learned about margins, and about indenting the first sentence in a paragraph. To do this on our typewriters, we had to lift a little lid on the back of the typewriter where there was a bar with little teeth in it corresponding to the spaces on a single line of print. If we wanted to indent our letter five spaces, we counted of five notches in this bar, pulled out a removable key from somewhere else on the bar, and inserted the key in the fifth groove from the left. Then when we hit the lever that moved the carriage, usually the typewriter would indent the sentence five spaces. I say usually, because sometimes someone swiped a couple of those removable keys. That really made things interesting, because when that happened, the carriage wouldn't ring the bell when we got to the end of a line on our letter. If the bell did ring, you were supposed to hit the lever and change to the next line in your letter. If the bell did not ring, we who were watching our fingers instead of the line we were typing, would continue blissfully typing on the same line until we went off the paper. Even then we often didn't notice that we had typed too far on that line until the carriage, with our sheet of paper on it, left the typewriter, and fell on the floor. When that happened, everyone would laugh (except Mr. Witte) and commence to ring the bells on their typewriters until the class sounded like a convention of Good Humor men on a hot day in July. Generally, it would take Mr. Witte a full five or ten minutes to restore order, and the student whose typewriter carriage had fallen on the floor would have to start all over again on his letter.

Somehow I achieved a passing grade in Typing 101, and swore never to touch a typewriter again.

I almost weakened in that resolve several years later in law school. On that particular day, we had a professor who told us that while he wouldn't take off points if we turned in a paper that was handwritten, he would give "extra credit" to those papers which were typed. That seemed fair to me until I thought about it for a moment. Then I realized that if everybody else typed their paper, and I was the only one who turned in a handwritten paper, the results to my grade would be the same as if he had taken off points for hand written papers! Thankfully, I conned a dear cousin of mine, who was a legal secretary, to type up my paper. But it was close, because, for a while, I seriously considered taking up typing again, at least until cousin Rosemary solved the problem for me through her typing skills.

Then came the computer age.

I resisted as long as I could. I hired more secretaries for my law office. I bought the best equipment possible. Still, gradually the work I needed to get done fell further and further behind. Finally, after being wooed by a sweet-talking computer salesman, my partners came to me with an ultimatum. Our office was going to be computerized, and I could either get on the band wagon, in which case they would buy me a computer of my very own, or I could continue to spit in the face of progress, and they would get their own machines and leave me in the dust.

Many of my friends had already caught the computer "bug" (The term "bug" is a computer term) and they had spoken very highly of computers. (My friends even said that "computers were fun!). So I relented. The firm bought computers. They even bought one for me.

The first thing I noticed was that computers, which we are told are "state of the art", still have a little window in them, only this window is on the front. Then I noticed that despite the window, you can't see into the darn thing to see how it works. (Why have a window if you can't look through it?)

Despite my misgivings, I embarked upon the course of learning to use one of these things, and, just like riding a bicycle (Once you learn, you don't forget!) the typing lessons that Mr. Witte labored so valiantly to instill in me, came back in a rush.

Now, I'm happy to report, while not yet a computer-whiz, I did manage to type out this column all by myself. In fact, I've even ordered another computer to use at home on evenings and weekends.

Who says you can't teach an old dog new tricks?


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