If you make a living will your should give copies of it to family members such as your spouse and children. You should also give copies to your doctor and lawyer and keep a copy at home in your medical file.
you should probably keep them in a binder suitcase or makes 5 copies and put 2 of them in a file cabinet
Your agent should have a copy of your policy, as does the underwriting department of the insurance company, and you should have a copy of the policy. I recommend making and keeping multiple copies of all policies. Possibly keep one copy of each at your home and other copies off premises. You have a proof of insurance card for the car. There is no good reason to keep a copy there. You may want to store at home with your other policies and other copies of policies at a safety deposit box in case a storm or fire affects the home.
You must make your own copies and keep them in a safe place. The IRS does not provide copies of previous year returns.
The contents of a composer should be arranged in a structured manner, including scores, recordings, and notes. It's important to keep these organized for easy access and reference. Storing digital copies and physical copies in archival-quality materials can help preserve them for future use.
Totally depends on the backup methodology and the rotation scheme. I have a couple of clients that backup everything everyday and keep the tapes for two weeks. They have 14 copies. Other's backup everything (or changed data in some cases) everyday, and keep the daily copies for two weeks, but keep the weekly tapes for months. There could be 30-40 copies in those cases.
The Treasurer, with copies to the other executives. Also, keep a dated copy for yourself, should this be needed later on.
The Answer is Yes But You Can keep The Copies For Yourself
Not required by law, but I use a "bill of sale", listing name of buyer AND seller, make, model, and serial number of firearm. Two copies. Buyer and seller sign both copies, I keep one, buyer gets one.
Keep patient. It will declare soon.
It isn't necessary since the entire record of all proceedings become permanent court records and are (theoretically) always available to you. But if you have the copies and wish to keep them, there's nothing wrokng with that either.
Often times, a newspaper will keep some copies of old editions of their paper. You can call or write to them and ask for copies.