1 result for (book:tsm AND heading:"chapter eight" AND stemmed:print)
[... 16 paragraphs ...]
“ ‘Election Day Sales,’ or ‘Values,’ is printed in black headlines at the top of both sides of the page. And gubatorial, or gubernatorial, applies because the election’s for New York State governor on November 9. I’d also say that the phrase ‘Election Day Sales’ is certainly in the vernacular.”
[... 21 paragraphs ...]
“Writing or printing on the lower left hand corner, very small, holding the object horizontally. Something on the back also.” (Both of these applied, except that the very small print was on the left side, not only the left corner.)
[... 5 paragraphs ...]
“A rectangular item with some dark coloring on it, perhaps dark blue.” (The bill is rectangular. The back of it is printed in heavy black.)
[... 11 paragraphs ...]
Yet sometimes I’d get discouraged even over good results. One test had pleased me no end at first. It was our 37th, held in the 237th session on March 2, 1966. The target item was a print Rob had taken of his own hand a week earlier, when we were reading some books on palmistry. Seth’s impressions couldn’t have been more concise. I went around the house with a smile on my face just thinking of it for days afterward.
I was doing the dishes when a drawback suddenly occurred to me. Rob was in the living room. I went in. Slowly. “I bet Dr. Instream would throw out the results of that hand-print test because we both worked on palmistry the week before,” I said.
“He might,” Rob admitted. “But the fact is, we’ve received plenty of letters that I could have used since then. We also did work in handwriting analysis; I could have used one of those samples. I could have used something older than you are—as I’ve done before. I could have used anything. No matter what we use, Seth still has to describe a particular item. And those impressions weren’t general; they could only refer to that specific hand print.”
[... 34 paragraphs ...]