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As part of its wartime collecting, the Clements acquired one of the initial 110 copies of the Charter of the United Nations (published June 1945). The copy was received inscribed by Alumnus-Senator-Delegate Arthur H. Vandenberg. The Clements also decided to keep No. 28 of The Missourian (Sep 1945) produced by the printing press of that ship in Tokyo Bay.The copy came with a letter from Printer’s Mate Louis A. Gainsley, who described the press in detail. Gainsley was originally from Ann Arbor, and worked at a gas station two blocks from the Clements. Finally, radioman Second Class George R. Tweed, who “hid out in the hills of Guam throughout the Japanese occupation,” reported that he had a copy of Modern Algebra (1933) with him. He sent it back to Professor Schorling who then presented it to Clements because it “saved him from mental degeneration during those years.”