Do you really want to send Jurph a message saying you like their work?
To all you enthusiastic users worldwide, keep up the good fight!
from the preface
It includes the proper way to address letters to general officers, ambassadors, kings, priests, governors, the President, and the Postmaster General, among others. It has fifteen different types of written communication. It has how to use (correctly) every piece of punctuation, how to footnote, how to properly capitalize which words. There's a guide to public speaking (that's the "Tongue" part). If you dig deeply enough, you'll even find an exhortation against the unnecessary use of military jargon and acronyms, especially in communication intended for civilian eyes. It is peppered liberally with hysterical and cynical quotations from people like Will Rogers and George Bernard Shaw, as well as selected clippings of The Far Side.
If it weren't for this book, the weight of the paper that passes through an Air Force office daily would quickly cripple the most able-bodied sergeant; the second lieutenants would panic, the captain would delegate, and the office would implode before the colonel even knew what was happening. He would send a memo off to another office about it, and that office would implode... this document saves paper, cuts jargon, and makes everyone in the Air Force who has read it a better writer and speaker.
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