Word: documentation
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...display in the Library of Congress. . . . He got no reply. So he wrote again, saying he would be glad to send an armed guard for it. Still no reply. MacLeish wrote a third time, saying he would not only send an armed squadron but would insure the document for $100,000. This likewise went unanswered. MacLeish gave up. . . . [Then] he received a penny postcard. It advised him that the article he wished to borrow would be along in a couple of days. The next day it arrived-done up in ordinary brown paper. . . . And it was insured...
...heavily burdened Air Force officer: "The command of which he was adjutant was scattered in three service commands. His headquarters received distribution direct from the Adjutant General's Office and from each of these three service command headquarters . . . each felt a duty to interpret . . . and expand [each] document before forwarding. As a result he frequently received several hundred copies of directives requiring him to do something four different ways...
...Staff officers should study each document, reflect: "Is it necessary to pass this on to subordinate units?" If it is, cut it in half...
There are going to be plenty of refreshments for which we can thank the committee headed by Captain Nolan's wife. Last, but certainly not least, is the mysterious document of Major Fay's-- "The Last Will and Testament of Adolph Hitler" the first and last showing, he claims...
...Minimum Agreement." Two decades of a false peace and the impact of global war had changed at least some sections of Senate thinking. The resolution's sponsors, who had sweated over the draft of their document for several weeks and buttonholed many a Senator for his ideas on it, hoped to muster a two-thirds majority...