Word: submitting
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Communists in Chungking retort that they: 1) cannot dissolve their armies and submit to Kuomintang military, civil and economic control without a guarantee of their survival as a political party; 2) fight the Japs wherever and whenever possible; 3) live under constant threat from 23 of the best of China's 113 Central Armies plus 45 others in reserve...
...teaching program costs the G.I. $2 (covering any number of courses). On finishing a course, the G.I. may take a Usafi examination devised with the aid of a high-test tester, Ralph Winfred Tyler of the University of Chicago. If he wants to study further after discharge, he can submit evidence of his self-administered work to any high school or college for credit. Usafi's Madison, Wis. office can hardly meet the self-teaching demand. Examples of letters received...
...armed intellectuals come to submit to the leadership of this raving dervish?" Some of them, says Heiden, did not submit; many of them openly and disrespectfully opposed him. But Hitler, like Roehm, Hess and Göring, was a "betrayed" soldier (and a brave one, Heiden insists); like Rosenberg and Goebbels, he was a frustrated man of questionable intellect. Few, if any, of his fellow "intellectuals" could so absorb themselves in the life of the Party, so readily sacrifice to this chosen duty the pleasures and comforts of life. Above all, none could so meticulously appraise the exact temper...
...this was only the first of many serious problems. He must forthwith come to grips with Congress on subsidies, on taxation. He must devise a new strategy on the inflation line, and submit his 1944 budget. He must soothe ruffled feelings in WMC and WPB, and-eventually-venture into the hot race-relations fight between his Fair Employment Practice Committee and Southern railroads (see p. 18). He must also, incidentally, save his own party from breaking in two. And on the hottest of all issues, the soldiers' vote bill, he must work out some fruitful settlement with Congress...
...they were not all necessarily anti-Willkie but they did not want to be even casually labeled as Willkieites. Fred Baker tried to read his program at a formal dinner; he was stopped. He tried to present it in open meeting; he was balked. All he could do was submit it to the resolutions committee, of which he was not made a member...