Word: tsar
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This week an executive order is expected to put the law into actual operation. It will also name a requisitioning tsar, probably tough-minded Brigadier General Philip B. Fleming, hitherto Wages & Hours administrator. OPMites eagerly awaited the order to see whether Administrator Fleming would be given real power to deal with non-cooperators...
...more than what SPAB said two weeks ago in ordering priorities for defense housing (TIME, Oct. 6). With most building materials earmarked for defense through priorities, non-defense builders would have to scramble for the rest, would doubtless have to curtail from 1941 levels. SPAB might logically make itself tsar of the building industry some day (as Bernard M. Baruch's World War I Industries Board did by requiring special permits for all projects involving more than $500). But it was not ready to go that far last week...
...paltering discussions of whether to impose wage controls and farm-price controls-two enormous areas which the bill in the first instance ignores, in the second winks at, lest labor and the farmers be outraged. (This bogey had been challenged by Bernard M. Baruch, World War I defense tsar, who declared that the public will support any bill that is uniform in its treatment of all classes and all goods, if the law is fairly and evenly administered...
...Dame, hallowed by the great Rockne's buttprints, is the toughest spot in U.S. football. On it this season is 33-year-old Frank Leahy, who quit Boston College at the chance to coach at Notre Dame (his alma mater) when Elmer Layden last winter resigned to become tsar of the professional National Football League. Besides a traditionally tough schedule, brave Coach Leahy will be further handicapped by his resolve to overthrow the system of a successful predecessor, substituting stuff that may or may not work with the material at hand. But so great is young Leahy...
...this neat scheme all nosegays go to big, fast-moving, hard-punching Lewis Rosenstiel, tsar of the U.S. liquor industry, boss of No. 1 U.S. rectifier Schenley Distillers. In late 1938, dead-sure war was coming, Rosenstiel began bulwarking his company against war's impact. He pow-wowed with all his executives, warned them hard times were on the way. Then he started barking orders like an Army sergeant, did not stop until he was sure Schenley was as shortage-proof as Rosenstiel could make...