Thanks- 'never occurred to me! I'll check it out.

Cheers K in OZ

Keith Helgesen.
Ph: (02) 62910787. 
Mob 0417-042171

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
David W. Fenton
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 9:06 AM
To: finale@shsu.edu
Subject: Re: [Finale] OT. Handwriting Music

On 25 Jun 2007 at 12:17, keith helgesen wrote:

> In my early days of British Army (Early 50's) the art of handwriting
> was known as DRYKNACKING. I found this to be widespread in the Armed
> Forces- Kneller Hall 1956 for instance but I do not know if it was
> also a "Civvy Street" name. If you were a good, fast 'dryknacker'
> (don't you hate the word!) you had a ready source of work- since this
> was before the general availability of photocopiers. A smelly purple
> spirit system was all that was available anywhere.
> 
> My question. Anyone know where the name DRYNACKING came from?

I'd never heard of it, but a Google search on "dryknack" turns up 
quite a few items.

-- 
David W. Fenton                    http://dfenton.com
David Fenton Associates       http://dfenton.com/DFA/

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