Copyright term, film labeling, and film preservation legislation : hearings before the Subcommittee on Courts and Intellectual Property of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fourth Congress, first session, on H.R. 989, H.R. 1248, and H.R. 1734 ... June 1 and July 13, 1995 (1996)

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252 Ms. Barbara Ringer March 10, 1994 Page 3 his legendary syncopated brass band, The "Hellfighters Regiment" (369th Infantry Division) introduced it... in the Victory Parade, February, 1919, that welcomed President Woodrow Wilson home from Paris and the Treaty of Versailles preliminaries. . .to an uproarious, still grieving, celebratory and exhausted populace in New York City. The song marked a moment in time. It became, virtually overnight, a singular part of American culture and history. It still is. There followed many performances and many recordings, which have been regularly re-mastered and reissued over the years. The song has become a musical, journalistic, commercial and literary catch phrase, often quoted, and (still!) often used in concerts, on television and radio, in films and documentaries. . .often to convey a sense of time and a sense of place to the generations that followed. . .at other times used in a whole other way to lend new meaning (for instance, a print ad by a Japanese company doing business in Paris. . . ) My point is: Still used, still there. After all these years. Not lost somewhere in "cyberspace". It is