Word: nash
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Science 1-2 course, which requires Mathematics through calculus of all freshmen, is regarded as the toughest of the "New Curriculum." Professor Arnold B. Arons, who studied under Professor Leonard K. Nash in G.S.A.S. and advocates many of Conant's ideas, make his course purposely tough "to jolt the boys out of a rut and make them exert a real intellectual effort." Unlike Harvard's Natural Science courses, Arons' Science 1-2 and 3-4 serve as the basic courses for science majors as well as other liberal arts concentrators...
...highest first-quarter sales record (705,303 passenger cars) in history. Some companies had slipped. U.S. Steel dropped $4.6 million to $44.8 million, and the railroads were down. The pressure was also on the independent automakers, and they did poorly. Studebaker lost $6,000,000 and passed its dividend. Nash lost $750,000, Packard $380,000 during the first three months. Kaiser reported that it had lost a grand total of $27 million in 1953 and was still...
...auto industry, such independents as Studebaker, Nash, Packard and Kaiser (see below) were badly pinched, and Chrysler's share of the market dropped in its struggle to keep up with General Motors and Ford. To the victors went the spoils: G.M.'s first quarter net was expected to top last year's $151 million by at least...
...NASH's tiny Metropolitan (TIME, March 22), the boldest bid by any big U.S. manufacturer to establish a small-car market, has gone over well. To date, 8,186 Metropolitans have been sold, and Nash has upped delivery schedules...
...prevailing belief was to trust and help one another. His remarks were part of a panel discussion on "Science-Toward World Peace" which included Bart J. Bok, Robert Wheeler Wilson, professor of Applied Astronomy, Kirtley F. Mather, professor of Geology, and Eugene G. Rochow, professor of Chemistry. Leonard K. Nash, associate professor of Chemistry, served as moderator...