Word: bohne
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Teaching Fellows in Electronics: William C. Bohn, of Maplewood, N. J., S.B. Harvard '25; George L. Harvey, of Atlanta, Go., S.M. University of Arkansas '40; James R. Hooper Jr., of Dedham, Mass., S.M. Harvard '39; Alfred Keck, of Hyde Park, Mass., S.M. Harvard '41; Yu-yueh A. Mao, of Pingyueh, Kweichow, China, S.M. Harvard '41; David Middleton, of New York, N. Y., A.B. Harvard '42; Sidney Soloway, of Worcester, Mass., S.B. Worcester Polytechnic Institute '41; Leo W. Tobin Jr., of Flint, Mich., A.B. Harvard '42; and Guy Worsley, of Pennington, N. J., A.M. Cambridge University, England...
Still the King. A year ago the U.S. thought a by-product of aluminum expansion would be the breaking of Alcoa's 50-year monopoly. Many other companies-notably Reynolds Metals, Olin Corp., Bohn Aluminum-seemed eager to cut into the field, especially since the U.S. Government was ready to finance them 100%. But Alcoa is now making 750,000,000 lb. and has taken 512,000,000 lb. of the Government's first 640,000,000 expansion and every pound of the second 640,000,000-lb. project. Result: in March 1943 the Alcoa trade-mark will...
...Davis and Lew Bohn of the second Freshmen were then moved into bow and four of the third Varsity, which automatically became the Combination crew, which races a similar Yale crew in the opening event of the Derby festivities. The Combies now line up with Davis, bow; George Nichols, 2; Winsor Soule, 3; Bohn, 4; Jim Donald, 5; Dick Ober, 6; Sohier, 7; Seligam, stroke; and Jimmy Ducey, coxswain...
When the Government started its suit, Alcoa had in fact no competition in the U.S. But defense needs and RFC loans have since put one competitor, Reynolds Metals, into the aluminum business, with three more-Olin Corp., Bohn Aluminum, Union Carbide & Carbon-on the point of joining the fray if Jesse Jones's Defense Plant Corp. ever gets around to signing the papers. Nevertheless the Government will appeal Judge Caffey's decision to the Supreme Court...
Alcoa's new plants will relieve but not end the aluminum shortage. Still uncontracted for is the rest of the expansion program announced by OPM shortly after the Senate investigation: four plants aggregating 260,000,000 lb. capacity to be operated by Reynolds, Bohn Aluminum & Brass, Union Carbide & Carbon, Olin Corp. Present capacity plus the new Alcoa expansions totals 1,200,000,000 lb. a year. Estimated Army, Navy, Lend-Lease and "essential" civilian requirements...