W m keck net worth
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When William Myron Keck Sr. was born on 27 April 1880, in Bradford, McKean, Pennsylvania, United States, his father, James Keck, was 28 and his mother, Eliza A Glendening, was 22. He married Alice Bertha Cummiskey in 1909, in Massachusetts, United States. They were the parents of at least 3 sons and 2 daughters. He lived in Pasadena Judicial Township, Los Angeles, California, United States in 1940 and Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States in 1950. He died on 20 August 1964, in San Gabriel, Los Angeles, California, United States, at the age of 84, and was buried in San Gabriel Cemetery, San Gabriel, Los Angeles, California, United States.
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Dr. Bill Keck (C. William Keck, M.D., M.P.H., F.A.C.P.M.) has been involved in serving the public and working within organizations for the public good for most of his life. On the formal side, he is Professor Emeritus and former Chair of the Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences at the Northeast Ohio Medical University, and former Director of Health for the City of Akron. He holds an MD degree from Case Western Reserve University, and an MPH degree from the Harvard School of Public Health. He is Past-President of the American Public Health Association, the Council on Education for Public Health, the Ohio Public Health Association, the Association of Ohio Health Commissioners, and the Summit County Medical Society. He currently chairs the Council on Linkages Between Academia and Public Health Practice and their Academic Health Department Learning Community, is Vice Chair of the Board of Directors of Medical Education Cooperation with Cuba (MEDICC) and is Editor in Chief of the journal, MEDICC Review. Dr. Keck is board certified in Preventive Medicine/Public Health
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Hawaii Discovers: The World’s Leading Observatory Was Born in Hawaii 25 Years Ago
By Steve Jefferson
Twenty-five years ago in 1990, the average US house cost $123,000, the Dow Jones averaged 2633 and gasoline cost a little more than a dollar-thirty a gallon. Saturn wasn’t just a planet: it was now a newly launched car company from GM, The Simpsons was aired for the first time and the Space Shuttle Discovery placed the Hubble Space Telescope into orbit.
And it was the beginning of a golden age for astronomers: a perfect trifecta of advances in electronic instrumentation, computing power, and engineering were assembling to produce a new generation of telescopes – one that would radically change the way we understood the cosmos and the forces that drive it.
Want Of Light
Before the W. M. Keck Observatory was built, the 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory reigned supreme. It was the largest telescope in the world, but after 50 years, progress in astronomy was flattening out because the instruments were needed more photons than the 5-meter mirror could provid
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