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harrypothead

09/10/04 10:33 AM

#64990 RE: JMKel #64976

THE MAGIC SELECTRIC

In these latter days of personal computers, laser jet printers, and all of the other electronic paraphernalia that has made Bill Gates disgustingly rich it is hard to realize the primitive state of typography in the antiquity of the 1970's.

Your old fashioned typewriter only had one font. IBM, however, had come out with the selectric typewriter which had a removable bouncing ball. You could remove the ball and replace it with another one having a different font. I acquired one of these magic typewriters and got several fonts, thus becoming a fanzine editor with a greater than usual number of balls.

This meant that PB had multiple fonts - generally the choices were courier for ordinary text and italics for editorial comments.

http://www.nesfa.org/History/HarterPB.htm

You're right about the Selectric. My parents had one it the last half of the 70's. The Selectric revolutionized typesetting. Newspapers used the Selectric for blocking, and multiple fonts were available. In what year was the Selectric typewriter first introduced?

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Tom K

09/10/04 10:47 AM

#65005 RE: JMKel #64976

JMKel, apparently nobody has the orignal documents. The documents posted by CBS looked like they were run through a copy machine 100 times...probably to help disguise the flaws. The biggest blunder the forger made was using Times New Roman. Times New Roman is NOT in the typewriter font database used by forensic document experts.
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mainehiker

09/10/04 11:00 AM

#65015 RE: JMKel #64976

they were not rare, in 73 i had one my dad bought for me used, i used it for high school stuff