Yup. That goes on to use it or loose it too. I learned to write in cursive in the early 60s,just like everybody else. In Junior High,in the days of mimeograph,the science teacher wrote a final exam and ran off some copies,but didn't run enough. He needed somebody to hand print the whole test again and I got volunteered to do it. After printing that whole exam,I got pretty good at it. Fast forward to when I hauled bulk milk just out of high school and had to sign weight slips about 20 times a day. I learned to scribble something that passed as a signature in a hurry. Today,I can't write cursive at all. I've tried,my hands just won't do it. When I changed banks 35 years ago,the bank president called me in to his office and asked me what that was that I was putting in the signature line on checks? He asked me if I could try a little harder. It still makes people look real hard at my checks when I write one if they don't know me. I've even been asked "Is that legal?". As far as doing math,I used to keep all my books in farm account books and I did my own taxes. I always did the math in my head,then checked it with a calculator. Now I do math with a calculator and just look at it with a little common sense and ask myself if it looks like it might be close.
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Today's Featured Article - A Belt Pulley? Really Doing Something? - by Chris Pratt. Belt Pulleys! Most of us conjure up a picture of a massive thresher with a wide belt lazily arching to a tractor 35 feet away throwing a cloud of dust, straw and grain, and while nostalgic, not too practical a method of using our tractors. While this may have been the bread and butter of the belt work in the past (since this is what made the money on many farms), the smaller tasks may have been and still can be its real claim to fame. The thresher would bring in the harvest (and income) once a y
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