Word: jensenism
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Vaughn negotiated the short, steep, slalom course only .8 seconds faster than Harvard's Kim Chaffee, the runner-up. Mark Jensen was tenth, Fred Noyes was 13th, and Riccardo Peccei was 15th for the Crimson...
...giant slalom, Chaffee tied for fourth with John Ciman of Dartmouth, while Jensen finished eighth. Coach Charlie Gibson was somewhat peeved that only two of his skiers were able to finish the course, though he blamed at least one of the tumbles on a defective binding...
...ALFRED JENSEN-Graham, 1014 Madison Ave. at 78th St. (third floor). More checkerboards than a shelfful of Purina boxes. Among them: Men and Horses, a three-panel impression of the Parthenon frieze that might have been done by a nearsighted mosaicist, and a monster quad-ruptych called The Birth of the Triglyph...
...reminder of the brilliant and valuable band of scientific immigrants† who fled Central Europe to escape Hitlerism. Wigner came to the U.S. from Germany in 1930. That same year, Mrs. Maria Goeppert Mayer, who shared the other half of the physics prize with Professor J. Hans D. Jensen of Heidelberg, came to the U.S. from Germany...
...only woman besides Marie Curie to win (1903) a Nobel physics prize, Mrs. Mayer was honored for research showing that atomic nuclei are built of onionlike layers of neutrons and protons held together by complicated forces. This concept, paralleling work by Professor Jensen, replaced the idea that the nucleus resembles a liquid drop, and it explained many nuclear properties...