He will also have to face up to the army's failures in the field.
One upshot was that more and more Austrians began to face up to the past.
They are acting as one to face up to the terrorists and destructive elements.
The vice-chancellor said higher education had to face up to the impact of the internet on delivering courses.
We encourage Baby Boomer business owners to wake up to the risk, and face up to the challenge.
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Remarkably, Oz discusses how people avoid getting this procedure because they are afraid to face up to the result.
She pressed her pallid and wild-eyed face up to the glass so that her nose and lips flattened and distorted.
The US's reluctance to face up to the ugliness of the options at its disposal will not make them any prettier.
"Everyone involved in education, including the EIS, needs to face up to the stark financial realities that councils must address, " she said.
At least Britain's politicians are starting to face up to the problem.
Now, with a Big Fix around the corner, he was ready to face up to the problem because he knew he could solve it.
The multi-million dollar ski industry has yet to face up to the possibility of reduced winter sports and in impact on the local economies.
Journalists have to face up to the fact that we -- along with about 800 million Facebook users worldwide -- are the product being sold.
But the company is now having to face up to the fact that it will take some time to develop and prove the necessary technology.
It can apply pressure to politicians, especially those in opposition parties, to face up to the problems of unemployment, rather than to pretend they hardly exist.
If adults won't face up to the truth, maybe it's time to bring in the children for new ideas, and for a reminder of what's at stake.
Have we the courage and the will to face up to the immorality and discrimination of the progressive tax, and demand a return to traditional proportionate taxation?
Earlier she told Sky News it was "tougher" than imprisonment to make people "face up to the sorts of implications of young people carrying knives on our streets".
Indeed, the bank's loans may actually do harm by crowding out private-sector lenders and delaying the day when mismanaged companies must face up to the demands of the capital markets.
Cardinal Martini says the Church must face up to the problems of modern life, including such issues as sexuality, divorce, the celibacy of the priesthood, and the role of women in the Church.
The other lesson of Ireland, many would say, is that the longer a government fails to face up to the true weakness of its banks, the bigger the eventual costs of the remedy.
The regeneration minister insisted that it was important for people to "vote with their feet", however it was "time to face up to the fact that a lot of communities have made their decision".
He said he was determined to "face up to the necessity of reform", an example of which is the part-privatisation of the National Air Traffic Control System (Nats) to be debated by the Commons on Tuesday.
Or is it, as many argue, an inability to tap into the political zeitgeist and face up to the reality that building powerful local leaders and tapping into regional issues are key to its national electoral fortunes?
Doctors will have to face up to the fact that computers can diagnose illnesses better than they can, and teachers will find that although their presence is needed to engage their pupils, their professional judgment often is not.
But as those few claims snowballed into hundreds, the family had to face up to the horrific truth: that the man they were so proud of as a media star and tireless charity fundraiser had a far darker side to his past.
Because I think you've got to face up to the fact that if you are a conscientious objector in a time of war, of your country at war, then you are excluded from the assembly of your countrymen in a particular manner.
The arguments on the Humber Estuary are being repeated across the North of England as local authorities face up to the fact that they will not be able to meet tough new limits on the use of landfill set by both our Government and the European Commission.
"On balance, it would be better to do this and face up to the possible difficulties of dealing with a hostile audience of cranks and fanatics rather than the alternative risk of leaving the field to the fanatics and giving the impression that we are afraid to stand up to questions, " concluded officials.
Mr Osborne's corporate tax policy is however vulnerable to a more fundamental criticism, that it doesn't face up to the fiscal reality of a global economy dominated by multinationals, which is that trying to force them to pay tax in a particular country is like endeavouring to squeeze a giant blancmange into a small box: the more you try, the bigger the leaks.
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