[TheForge] [OT] Re: Cats, boots (Was: chickens)

Ron Childers ron at munlaw.net
Fri Mar 25 08:38:52 EDT 2011


Unfortunately this is an all too familiar scenario all over the country.
Are you sure Mr. Kay wasn't an alias for Nelson Bennett, director of
CETA at Fla. A&M University? Millions of dollars might as well have been
flushed down the sewer, and this was new equipment. Purchased with your
tax dollars.

That idiot made such remarks as "U lettin yo edicashun goata yo haid".
"How come it iz yo studunts makes all A's?" "I think you grades too
easy; nunna the utta 'stucktas' students makes all A's". "Well, my
students learn"; I challenged him to have his other "stucktas" concoct
the hardest test they could and bet him every one of my students would
pass it.

He thought it was a great idea until I told him I would then give my
test to the other "stucta's" students to which he replied, "Don't be
redicalus". Yeah, that's what I thought. A prime example of the Peter
principle in action.

I had enough of that bs and told that bunch in a faculty meeting that
not a damn one of them had brains enough to pick cotton for my
granddaddy.





-----Original Message-----
From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Andrew Vida
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2011 9:05 PM
To: mspencer at tallships.ca; Blacksmithing List Sponsored by ABANA
Subject: Re: [TheForge] [OT] Re: Cats, boots (Was: chickens)

I have a few sets of quoins somewhere, and a quoin key, composing 
sticks, galleys... all stuff I rescued from the NYC Bd. of Ed.  In the 
80s when I was teaching, those idiots, and I am being both kind to them 
here as well as very unkind to the idiots of the world, were most 
feverishly dismantling their shops, throwing everything out.  It was a 
waste of such obscene proportions that words fail me.  It was either GE 
or Westinghouse had donated hundreds of thousands of dollars of old 
press equipment - pilot presses, a large sheet-fed press, several AB 
Dick 360 2 cylinder offset presses, imposing stones, type, chases, inks,

horizontal process cameras, films, plate burners, and everything else 
you could imagine to run your own printing business.  The bastard for 
whom I worked, Harvey Kay (may he rot in hell), threw it all away, never

having set any of it up, which a colleague and I were going to do.  He 
almost lost his job over it, but in the end he skated, proceeded to CCNY

where he dismantled and shut down the Industrial Arts department, and 
then slithered his way to Columbia University, where I think he may 
still be residing in one of the sewer lines with the rest of his commie 
friends.  Yes, it's still a sore subject with me, 27 years later.

Mike Spencer wrote:
> Bruce wrote:
> 
>> For "wedge" read "screw" and all your objections disappear. 
> 
> I know this isn't what you're referring to but it's related:
> 
> I was fortunate to be able to take "print shop" in 9th grade.  I
> printed up forms for a bogus laboratory that allowed me to order a lot
> of dangerous and otherwise unobtainable chemicals.  But that's another
> story.
> 
> The print shop had really cool devices called quoins, pairs of iron
> wedges which, when put together on a flat surface, formed a unit with
> parallel sides and a toothed groove down the center.  The teeth formed
> a kind of diagonal rack gear.  A corresponding tip on a T-handled tool
> made a pinion.  When the hand-set type was ready to go, it was placed
> on a stone surface inside a steel frame -- a "chase" -- and the extra
> space mostly filled with blocks of polished hardwood.  But space was
> left for the quoins, which were inserted loosely and in pairs on at
> least one side and one end.
> 
> Then you inserted a wrench -- the pinion-like tool -- into a quoin
> pair and twisted.  That forced the wedge-shaped halves to bypass each
> other and exert enormous force on the block of type.  When this was
> done on both sides or all around, the type was "locked in chase" and
> ready to go to the press.
> 
> Alas, I've never come across any of those quoins to put in my tool box
> but I have come across some places where they'd have been handy,
> places where I wanted to exert considerable force from the inside of
> something outward but had severe space limitations.
> 
> In earlier centuries, printers used wooden wedges tapped into place
> with a hammer.  The iron ones, though, always impressed me as a
> landmark of technological and blacksmitherly cleverness.
> 
> I don't *think* that's way off topic.  Opinions may vary. :-)
> 
> - Mike
> 
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