1. usually contains what you have done on
post today and what
outnesses have been spotted and what
outnesses you handled. You can say whatever you wish also.
(OODs 19 Apr 72) 2. (for the
Commodore) the
report should contain:
(a) productions and actions taken by you on your
post,
(b) actions taken by you to correct
outnesses you have found in the
ship and others,
(c) comments. It is an optional
line which each person
aboard the flagship has with the
Commodore to inform him of his daily actions.
(FSO 127R) 3. the
crew members of a
Sea Org installation may write a daily
report to their
Commanding Officer. This should be heartily encouraged by commanding officers, as a daily
report from each
crew member can give the
CO excellent
data and a
general summary of
crew activities and
morale. The procedure for a
crew member writing a
day report is
(a) productions and actions taken during the
day on
post,
(b) actions taken to correct
outnesses in the
area and in others.
(FO 2576) 4. daily reports to
aides,
captains, COs,
OTL and juniors are not
compliance reports but
information only. Such daily reports contain:
(1) the activities of their zone,
(2) particularly any important
event that is occurring,
(3) any
data that would be of
interest to the
senior.
(BPL 26 Jan 69RA) 5. the
report is a very simple affair. It is headed "To
LRH Daily
Report." It
marks the
time of ending
work for the
day, the date, the
division and any
department and any
section numbers, a very
brief statement of the
day's
work doneby the
staff member (for
staff auditors the name of any
pc audited and instructors the number of students taught that
day by
actual count and any absences or
blows), and the signature of the
staff member.
(HCO PL 14 Apr 65 III) Abbr. DR.