Word: memos
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...memo said he was leaving to "seek newprofessional challenges," and went on to describehis new role at Harvard Magazine. It said Costawill not be permanently replaced until theUniversity names a new vice president forgovernment, community and public affairs...
Unfortunately for their cause, gay soldiers fall into two of the categories most likely to be exempted from some constitutional guarantees: soldiers . . . and gays. Reno's memo opened with the sentence, "The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that the courts must review decisions by . . . military commanders deferentially." In the name of national defense, the court has repeatedly yielded to the military on issues ranging from a prohibition of yarmulkes to the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. To this, Kevin Cathcart, executive director of the gay-rights group Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, responds, "The military...
...course, hopes he steals Leno's audience, whose numbers are about the same as Johnny Carson's were. And Leno, whatever his anxiety over competing with the talk-show host who made him famous, is happy to milk the story for sharp laughs. Last week he read an "NBC memo" regarding the intellectual properties Dave may not use on CBS: the letters N, B or C ("legally they're ours"); the term Letterman ("because it originated with the singing group who appeared on NBC's Kraft Music Hall with Eddy Arnold in 1970"); and the phrase "pinhead network executives" ("Pinhead...
...memo below is the smoking gun in the General Accounting Office's recent damning evaluation of the Pentagon. The Air Force issued data deceptively understating the size of the radar profile of the B1-B bomber. This Air Force ^ memo contains the accurate data (here blacked out by the GAO), along with the admonition that that information be kept from the GAO. The Pentagon gave the memo to the GAO by accident...
...copiers, fax machines and printers into a seamless digital web, thus permitting them to exchange information and circulate documents electronically. The system -- based on Microsoft's wildly successful Windows software -- could lead to a new wave of advanced office machines that would, for example, allow someone to write a memo and instantly send it to the computer screens of his staff members, the photocopier down the hall, his boss's printer, and the fax machines and computers of his division managers around the world...