Word: corp
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Dutch name. He majored in economics at Stanford, went to Oxford as a Rhodes scholar and, as a lanky 6-foot 4-incher, rowed No. 4 on the New College crew. As a mathematician and economist he spent four years with California's think factory, the Rand Corp., just pondering military strategy. And then, in 1960, he went to the Pentagon...
...Today, on his frequent romps up the California coast, Steve guns his Jag up to 140 and keeps it there. But he is more than a domestic menace. He is a big-league racing driver too. Like Stirling Moss, he was once a paid member of the British Motor Corp.'s racing team...
...project was originated by the University of Pittsburgh's Chancellor Dr. Edward H. Litchfield, who last year founded the Oakland Corp. as a private development company, and enlisted the support of a group of nonprofit city institutions. Fred Smith, who was the prime mover of the massive Prudential Research Center in Boston, was brought in as president and operating head (Litchfield is board chairman), and Architect Max Abramovitz, who designed the Philharmonic Hall in New York's Lincoln Center, was hired...
Arthur K. Watson, president, IBM World Trade Corp . . . LL.D...
...flight trainer in 1929. After selling thousands of Link Trainers to Allied Air Forces in World War II, Link foresaw the postwar rush to jets, began developing the electronic jet simulator now used by 14 airlines. To get needed development funds, Link in 1954 merged into General Precision Equipment Corp., became a semi-active director. Though its figures are buried within General Precision's, the Link division had 1962 sales of about $30 million, made a profit of about...