Word: implicitly
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Doktor Rosenberg had as yet had little time for real administrative action. But for months his experts had been planning the economic exploitation of the conquered farms and factories. And certain social innovations might be expected. They were implicit in Doktor Rosenberg's nickname-The Jew Gobbler...
...importance of the comparison is that Manager Sloan is a democrat. He is a democrat not only because he is a human, just and generous man, but because he could not operate in any other way. He did not learn democracy in books. His democracy is implicit in his life. It is realistic, practical, unsentimental. His success with General Motors was that he literally made his management a democracy of brains, for he knows that democracy is the vital fluid of great corporate organizations, holding their personnel from top to bottom in a creative balance to each other. When...
...days before Germany's Balkan campaign, a pro-German Arab nationalist, Seyid Rashid Ali El-Gailani, overthrew five-year-old Monarch Feisal II's pro-British Regent. Because of the threat implicit in this coup, the British sent 1,200 troops to Basra, Iraq's main port, at the head of the Persian Gulf. El-Gailani acquiesced in the landing and publicly subscribed to the 1930 Anglo-Iraq Treaty of Alliance which justified it ("The aid of . . . Iraq in the event of war or the imminent menace of war will consist in . . . use of railways, rivers, ports...
Struggle of Opinion. Implicit in Colonel Lindbergh's speech was the acknowledgment that the U.S. at large has already taken sides in the war. His plea was that to fight the war would be a great mistake because Hitler was bound to win. It was basically a plea against fighting as a matter, not of moral or political, but of military opinion...
...Implicit also in Knudsen's announcement was a hint that other industries may soon follow automobiles into the quota lists. Already OPM has its eye on refrigerator trays (aluminum), other consumer goods which use material that defense manufacturers are finding hard to get. In 1918 the War Industries Board ordered a 50% cut in production of sewing machines, oil stoves, electric heating appliances; a 30% cut in watches and cases; a 25% cut in metal stamps and stencils, metal tags, rubber stamps. Since 1918, U.S. industry has expanded, but so have the rules of warfare...