manual adding machine, with the big heavy keys and extra keys for 10, 100, 500, and so on. And a handle you pulled down instead of an enter key.
I think I stil lhave one of these that I bought(at my mother's house), at about age 8, from a school district auction. Man, I loved that thing! It was so satisfying to pull the handle and have it make the noise!
ita could definitely use House. Oh, speaking of House -- a woman at work the other day was saying she had just bought a house in Plainsboro, and explaining that it was right next to Princeton. I was like, "Everyone knows that! Princeton-Plainsboro Hospital!" Luckily, I only said that in my head.
I had to look it up (http://www.answers.com/spindle&r=67) before y'all posted it:
spin·dle (spĭn'dl)
v., -dled, -dling, -dles.
v.tr.
1. To furnish or equip with a spindle or spindles.
2. To impale or perforate on a spindle: Do not fold, spindle, or mutilate this card.
Back when you handed newspaper copy in on paper, the editor had a spindle his desk and, when he decided not to run a story, he spiked it, i.e., stuck in on the spindle. At the first newspaper I worked for, we all had these lethal spikes consisting of a sharp pieces of metal stuck in lumps of lead from the Linotype. They always had about 20 pink "While You Were Out" forms spiked on them.
I wish there were a real-life House who could fix ita.
They're also used in a lot of restaurants for tickets that have gone out.
My MiL was sensitive to smoke and to Windex (and other window cleaners). My FiL smoked but since MiL was so sensitive to it, he only smoked at work and in their car on the way to work. But he always had to clean the car out and couldn't use Windex because of her other sensitivites. So he used vinegar to clean their car windows from the smoke.
Their vehicle smelled highly of vinegar and I swear, I'd get nauseated every time I had to ride in their car.
My magic eraser works great on windows, too. Especially those caked with the crusty mix of dog drool and dirt and tiny hand prints.
The smell of vinegar reminds me of Easter egg dyeing. That smell was the only part of the process that I hated.
I'm overcome with magic eraser love. Today marks my first use and I'm practically orgasmic!
I use white vinegar to clean everything...that and baking soda...the smell says 'clean' to me.
Also, tommyrot? Re some total stranger's recent discovery of the proto-Bender? Humph, I say, humph.
Bah. That post was obviously hidden from me... by magiks. Or cyber-toads.
I'm curious to know what other green cleaning methods people use. Do you dilute your vinegar for windows? Do you put it in your own spritzer bottle?
I buy marketed green cleaning products, which have a varying success rate. I like Simple Green, it seems fairly effective and smells nice. I use a green dishsoap, too, which is not a brand I'm familiar with, so I'm not sure how actually green it is. It works fine, but it takes more of it than normal.