Ronald O. Newlon
Asst Professor
"The Principles of Free Enterprise"
President
Technical Director
Product Development
Technology Corporation
Discard everything you know about Free Enterprise because it is all wrong! Expunge all you learned about Keynes Economics since it does not work in the real world of the business enterprise!
For the first time, you will be introduced to a method of conducting business on an unparalleled plane of excellence that has the potential to function through time.
Now, using the principles of free enterprise, your enterprise can focus on developing new products and services that meet the needs of your clients while safeguarding the principal knowledge and technologies from which they were developed.
Assistant Professor Newlon taught classes at CSUN (California State University Northridge) in Northridge, California out of the Computer and Electrical Engineering Department. At the request of the Dean of the School he developed a new technique of teaching engineering science in such a way that students could produce excellent results their first day of work in industry. This solved the complaint of students and companies that students were not well prepared to solve engineering problems at their place of employment.
Mr. Newlon spent forty-one years in industry developing the most advanced products for the United States National Laboratories, the United States Military, and Commercial Clients. He worked at powerhouse companies that included Hughes Aircraft Company of Culver City, California, Martin Marietta Aerospace Corporation of Denver, Colorado, and Teledyne Brown Engineering of Huntsville, Alabama. His engineering, project management, research and development talents were utilized on projects that included Space Based High Energy Lasers, precision pointing and tracking systems, fire control systems, automatic computer controlled aircraft flight control systems, computer controlled electronic module test systems, first-order and second-order gravity gradient measurement instruments, and advanced particle communication systems.