| 1930 - 324 pages
...arrangement and other considerations that may arise in connection with the compilation of the catalogue. The Quartermaster General of the Army and the Paymaster General of the Navy have detailed civilian personnel to assist the board in the compilation of the catalogue. Commercial... | |
| 1951 - 846 pages
...Purchases). The original Committee consisted of the Director of Procurement of the Treasury Department, the Quartermaster General of the Army, and the Paymaster General of the Navy. In June and July 1940 assistants to the Secretaries of the Treasury and War replaced the Director of... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Military Affairs - 1945 - 742 pages
...of the addressees. 4. The specific recommendation made in the joint letter from Major General C. I* Corbin for The Quartermaster General and Rear Admiral...and shall be in sufficient detail for implementation ilium approval. The plans should be expedited, and either the plans, or a progress rej>ort thereon... | |
| Keith D. McFarland - 1975 - 376 pages
...individuals. The Treasury Department's Director of Procurement was chairman, and the other members were the Quartermaster General of the Army and the Paymaster General of the Navy.6 The President had deliberately kept Woodring and Johnson off the committee and had made an official... | |
| Keith D. McFarland, David L. Roll - 2005 - 492 pages
...head the group, the president gave Morgenthau virtual control. The committee's other two members were the quartermaster general of the army and the paymaster general of the navy.41 In one of those rare instances of agreement, both Woodring and Johnson criticized the president's... | |
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