Word: conformal
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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FIRST, THE TONE OF THE WHOLE ARTICLE HAS BEEN COMPLETELY CHANGED BY CONTINUALLY ADDING TOO STRONG EXPRESSIONS. SECOND, SOME QUOTATIONS IN THE SAID ARTICLE COULD NOT HAVE BEEN UTTERED BY ME AS THEY DO NOT CONFORM WITH THE PRESENT SITUATION IN POLAND WITH WHICH I AM WELL ACQUAINTED. FOR EXAMPLE...
...Hygiene Department has reasons, if not justification, for its policy. The compulsory fee is a form of insurance and a large number of individuals must contribute to the kitty so that its operation may conform to the law of averages. The University feels obligated to protect the health of every student whether he come from far or near. Perhaps those who must pay their "protection" fee without expecting ever to benefit by a single nickel's worth of medical services would feel less defrauded if they could know that their contribution helped guarantee every Harvard student the best and most...
...strict), he had a little trouble. The newcomers, working in large groups at freight yards, netted several tons a night and sold them through a central organization at fixed prices. They disliked small-time operators like Klaus, who undersold them. But after a little rough stuff, Klaus agreed to conform to the pros' price schedule, and everything went smoothly until the first disastrous signs of spring...
...strength of U.N. depends, basically, on the U.S. As long as the U.S. supports U.N. and as long as U.S. policies conform to principles of democracy, positive and independent actions in the world will strengthen, not weaken, the world organization of which the U.S. is the most important part...
...last week. The Communist daily, an old Ba Gu addict if there ever was one, swore off the filthy stuff. Originally, said a learned note in the Worker's "Recruiter" column, Ba Gu was a Manchu civil-service test which "had no content at all but had to conform to very strict rules of form and rhetoric." Now the Chinese Communists were against it, and so> was the Daily Worker...