Word: admitting
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...liable to be blacklisted by his neighbors or associates and enrolled in the Doom Book in the Department of Justice." Henry Morgenthau was not for this kind of "voluntarism"-in a nation fighting for freedom, he still shied away from candid compulsion. And he was as yet unwilling to admit that truly voluntary sales will not suffice...
...Fogg dares tell these days is where the large irreplacable portion of its $5,000,000 collection has been hidden for the duration. All of the most precious works usually in the Fogg galleries have been whisked away to safer storage "in the country". Officials do admit, however, that none is with the exhibits from the National Gallery now in Colorado...
...Guild decided for the present to remain unaffiliated with any union. There were no "harsh working conditions" to be alleviated, no wage-hour disputes. Before initiating a drive for new membership, the charter members brooded a bit as to whom they should admit to their group. Radio directors vary widely in ability and authority, including quite a few whose view of their calling is not ambitious. The Guild resolved to award annual "radio Oscars"-citations for outstanding work in all phases of radio, not merely in directing. Unofficially, members gave their approval to an interesting but as yet barely perceptible...
Designed to help Physics students make themselves more valuable to the country's armed forces, the program has been approved by Colonel King of the Army Signal Corps. As the situation stands now, the Signal Corps will admit Juniors and Seniors enrolled in the field to the enlisted reserve. When these students receive their degree, they will be given officers' commissions, provided they pass the Army's physical requirements...
...enriched" and made more "objective." All this is reassuring reading but a hard pill to swallow, inasmuch as the radical moderns seemed to have failed through their very refusal to "grapple" with any basic emotional problems, and have hidden themselves behind a curtain of technique. They are afraid to admit that all music must of necessity be "subjective," and arise solely from the individual composer's inner life. I think that the answer to the barrenness of their music lies in the confused and dislocated emotional lives of the composers themselves, rather than in any conscious theories they might hold...