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Word: oem (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Indeed it was. As the guns sounded overseas, gallus-snapping Congressmen and dollar-a-year New Dealers, bullnecked racists and high-toned society hostesses, secretaries and alphabet-soup bureaucrats from the OPA, BEW, CAS and OEM all began to audition for their roles in history. The little Southern town abruptly became an arena of contradictions, and Brinkley surveys them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Historic Roles WASHINGTON GOES TO WAR | 3/28/1988 | See Source »

...expediter,'' Graham bowled through bottlenecks and red tape with highhanded ease, won kudos for his role in boosting high octane gas output and lending $8 billion in V-Loans to get defense plants humming. When he lacked the right to check on lagging gasoline procurement, he had OEM's Chief Wayne Coy put a slip of paper on the President's desk reading: "Look into high octane gas." F.D.R.'s initials turned it into a badge of authority...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Guest at Breakfast | 4/16/1956 | See Source »

...Commerce to succeed Richard L. Bowditch. Owner of six wholesale groceries, a public warehouse and a 450-acre cattle farm near Roanoke, Va., Johnston has been an active member of the Chamber for 22 years and a business consultant to the RFC, the Navy, the OPA and the OEM. Johnston feels that there may be a slight increase in the number of small business failures, but he hopes that "we won't turn into a nation of economic hypochondriacs and go running to the Government for emergency injections all the time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PERSONNEL: Changes of the Week, may 3, 1954 | 5/3/1954 | See Source »

Dewey also took time to trace, in considerable detail, the long record of Administration bungling in setting up and tearing down defense agencies, from WRB through OEM and NDAC down to OPM and SPAB and finally WPB, which only a month ago "fell apart . . . and the head of the board was given a ticket to China...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: U.S. At War: Time for a Change | 10/16/1944 | See Source »

Standing a bare three feet away from the red, the Harvard Film Society goes into New Lecture Hall at eight o'clock again tonight on its accelerated program. The pictures are Dostoyevaski's "Crime and Punishment" and "Tanks." the famous OEM documentary of the production war. The Society is showing Pierre Blauchard's French version of a Russian novel not for its snob appeal, the Executive Committee states, but "because students want to see good pictures, as they have during the Society's six-year existence...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Film Society, Nearly In Red, Shows 'Tanks' | 7/27/1942 | See Source »

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