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    A spindle (or colloquially, a spike) is an upright spike used to hold papers waiting for processing. "Spindling" or "spiking" was the act of spearing a paper document onto the spike. Early Hollerith cards bore the inscription "do not bend, fold, spindle or mutilate", with spindling in particular being almost sure to lead to the Hollerith cards being misread.
    Spindling served the twin purposes of accumulating paperwork in a way that would not permit it to be blown about by the summer breeze common prior to the advent of air conditioning, along with the hole made by the spindle being indicative of some sort of processing when the paperwork was viewed subsequently.

    Many spindles come with a plastic safety cap to prevent injury. Many early spindles have bases that are quite decorative.

    The spindle also makes an appearance in:
      the feature film The Butterfly Effect in which, as a child, the main character uses twin spindles on his teacher's desk to create hand stigmata later in life.

    Another colloquialism arising from the use of this device was "spiking", which meant a de facto killing of a controversial newspaper article.



        Spindle (stationery)
     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Spindle (stationery)". link