![]() Per diem localities with county definitions shall include "all locations within, or entirely surrounded by, the corporate limits of the key city as well as the boundaries of the listed counties, including independent entities located within the boundaries of the key city and the listed counties (unless otherwise listed separately)." ![]() Unless otherwise specified, the per diem locality is defined as "all locations within, or entirely surrounded by, the corporate limits of the key city, including independent entities located within those boundaries." I suggest Army/Navy Surplus stores, for the good 'old' Record books.Traveler reimbursement is based on the location of the work activities and not the accommodations, unless lodging is not available at the work activity, then the agency may authorize the rate where lodging is obtained. Once our Government made things right.back in typewriter days, they even had good paper. Not enough to make writing on the other side any kind of a problem. It was in a 'flexi' OF so was a wet nib with a wet ink. There was some show through with the wet MB ink. A wet BB, a B, A wet semi flex KM, and a couple of pens with a wet MB Winter Forest. Just pulled it out and gave it a testing with some five or six fountain pens. It has some notes for SF book ideas.Īnother is full of a western or other western ideas, but it is in a crate of the first draft. I only have one of the Record books left that is not well used. I had tried one or two small ones your size but gave them away or trashed them during moves as being too small to be of any use. It was more a specialty shop item then.īack in Typewriter days, we had good still fountain pen friendly paper, and the Government also. Of course back then Moleskine was sized to be fountain pen friendly and for the more well to do. I kept mine because it was the best I'd ever seen. It's good paper, the military/government had set good standards for writing papers before computer printers came into being. We didn't worry about that back in the day. ![]() $3.35 ea for the 5.5" x 8" (~Moleskine sized) Sourcing: Mancon, nice people to deal with, $10 flat rate shipping. I'm giving the journal's a tentative thumbs up, great value, work best with a drier pen/ink combination. I posted a few bad cellphone pics the other day in VickyWatson's "Trying To Source A Green Linen Bound A4 Journal." thread, I've reshot a few decent one's and figured I'd post my first review. Moleskine bleed comparison, same pen & ink I tend to write my 'neat' notes primarily on the right face, my 'scribbles' on the back face so a bit of bleeding doesn't phase me. Follow up sample with my everyday ink & pen, Pel 400 with BBK looks pretty good as well. The paper feels a little thinner than a Moleskine, mild feathering with my 9314B Estie nib (super wet writer), none with the fine Parker 21, paper is uncoated, fast drying and has a tiny bit of tooth, unlike Clairfontaine/Rhodia paper (which I find a bit too slick, ink takes forever to dry). The paper is crisp white in colour, with light blue ruling, cover size is the same as a Moleskine but the pages are slightly smaller as they're not trimmed flush to the binding as a Moleskine is.Ĭover is decent quality cardboard, cloth covered, resembles a 60's or 70's hardback novel. So, in my desire to find something inexpensive, in the same form factor, I managed to find some US Army logbooks that look like a potential stand in, sewn binding, sturdy cover, $3.35 ea. ![]() I've not had a "bad" Moleskine yet, and from reports here I'm due. I love everything but the pricetag, they run $20 or so locally which causes me tremendous heartache as a dedicated cheapskate. I've been using the "large" sized Moleskine 5"x8" notebooks as my working journals for a few months, I take a fair number of notes daily and do quite a few sketches of equipment and whatnot so the 1/2 sheet size is handy for me. ![]()
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