Gotta love weekends out of town...
I think we've got the Midchart move down, however, thanks to the Internet Archive, we have:
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Dec 28, 1996 (First available)
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May21,2001 (Last pulled before change)
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Mar 27, 2002 (First pulled after change)
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Pre Jan 3,2005 (pdf)
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Jan3, 2005 (pdf) (here's the "defence limited to match length" cutin)
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Today (pdf)
One can see how, no matter what the intentions of the committee, the theory that the whole point behind the defence database initiative was to gut the Mid-Chart is difficult to falsify.
Fred, I do trust you. I'm not so sure I trust your web of trust, though; and I certainly don't trust their web of trust. Given that I have butted heads with some fairly major Names in American bridge over this issue (what should be allowed over what is; using restrictions to avoid dealing with poor disclosure; using the Mid-Chart in general as a "but we allow greater freedom, you just have to find a game" while making Mid-Chart games inconsistently available in such a way as to effectively neuter any interest in learning a Mid-Chart *system* (as opposed to playing bolt-on 2-bids or the like); it's not fair because it's unfamiliar; it's unfair because I need to carry around 100 pages of notes (which basically boiled down to "it's unfamiliar", as that person was happy with remembering 8-15 4+, 11-15 5+, 11-18 4+, 12-21 5+, or 13+ opening 1M defences, but not 2D mini-multi, 2D full multi, 2D weak in H or GF - I'm sure "ideal" defences to the former set are no less complicated, and at least two of the natural ranges are equally rare)) most of whom either said "it won't be allowed here" or "it shouldn't be allowed" somewhere in the conversation, the chance that one of that set is both someone you trust, and also someone who would use his power to get what he wanted should he have that power, whether it was the "right way" or not, is not negligible; and the chance that one of that set is in the two-degrees cloud is decent. Now, whether said person, should he exist, *has* the power, is another story altogether.
All of that is saying that, even for someone who tries to trust until disappointed, and usually succeeds, the visuals in this case are important; for the more suspicious, only more so. If the C&C committee isn't doing what the more suspicious believe they are, and if they want the suspicions to not be so plausible to a new viewer, then they've dug themselves a pretty big hole, and they need to make fixing the visuals a priority. And if that means finding someone willing to be and capable of being a scribe for minutes/agenda/reports; if it means finding someone willing to write and capable of discerning and transcribing guidelines for defence submissions and answers to "why was this [crazy] decision made" - if it's been asked to death, well, that's what FAQs are for; if it means putting some work into getting a new defence (any new defence, provided it's not totally hamstrung with "you can play this convention and these followups; if you do anything - at all - different, you'll need to submit your defence" - that's not approving defences, that's approving partnerships) approved, even actively assisting the appellants; if it means finding someone who can and will respond in a timely manner, even if it is "we'll discuss this at the next NABC, so don't expect to hear anything until March"; then that needs to be done. It can be - it may be very hard, I know, but it's not impossible - if the end is desired enough.
Apologies for the Kafkaesque sentence structures.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)