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Yellow Hi-Liter

Yellow Hi-Liter  
Gregory L. Hansen
 Re: Yellow Hi-Liter  
Duckshit
 Re: Yellow Hi-Liter  
Edward Green
From:Gregory L. Hansen
Subject:Yellow Hi-Liter
Date:Mon, 24 Jan 2005 00:32:22 +0000 (UTC)
I was looking at a used book I've had laying around for a while, with
yellow hi-liter here and there. Many years ago I've read somewhere that
yellow hi-liters should be used in books, and I've seen a number of books
where every single word except the occasional indefinite article was
important enough to be hi-lited.

But not in old books (before 1970), and not much in newer ones. Is that
like some fad that went through the 80's and 90's and then died out?
--
"I'm giving you the chance to look fate in those pretty eyes of hers
and say, 'Step off, bitch. This is my party and you're not invited.'"
-- Chris Shugart, _Testosterone Magazine_
From:Duckshit
Subject:Re: Yellow Hi-Liter
Date:Sun, 23 Jan 2005 20:40:36 -0600

"Gregory L. Hansen" wrote in message
news:ct1fmm$m8m$2@rainier.uits.indiana.edu...
> I was looking at a used book I've had laying around for a while, with
> yellow hi-liter here and there. Many years ago I've read somewhere that
> yellow hi-liters should be used in books,

but only in "junk" books, not great books or scientific books.
It minimizes what is not hi-lighted, which is a mistake in many books.

>and I've seen a number of books
> where every single word except the occasional indefinite article was
> important enough to be hi-lited.

the operator of the hi-lighter in those cases is defective, it underscored
or hi-lighted his lack of reading without pointing a finger at each word..

>
> But not in old books (before 1970), and not much in newer ones. Is that
> like some fad that went through the 80's and 90's and then died out?
> --

they do it today too, but I think this social custom is used by college
freshman and sophomores in gernic class books only.

> "I'm giving you the chance to look fate in those pretty eyes of hers
> and say, 'Step off, bitch. This is my party and you're not invited.'"
> -- Chris Shugart, _Testosterone Magazine_
From:Edward Green
Subject:Re: Yellow Hi-Liter
Date:23 Jan 2005 16:54:37 -0800
Gregory L. Hansen wrote:

> I was looking at a used book I've had laying around for a while, with

> yellow hi-liter here and there. Many years ago I've read somewhere
that
> yellow hi-liters should be used in books,

An odd ethical imperative.

> and I've seen a number of books
> where every single word except the occasional indefinite article was
> important enough to be hi-lited.
>
> But not in old books (before 1970), and not much in newer ones. Is
that
> like some fad that went through the 80's and 90's and then died out?

Probably highlighters did not exist earlier? Yes.

I always thought marking up books was an abomination, but then, that's
probably much more respect than most textbooks deserve. I prefer
penciled annotations and notes in the margin. Then again, I remember
once, in frustration, instead of highlighting what I thought was
important in a text, blacking out everything I didn't think was
important.
   

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