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"Bruce M. King is a psychologist and professor at Clemson University. Bruce M. King went to a military-dependents high school in London, England, and received a B.A. in psychology from UCLA in 1969 and a Ph.D. in biopsychology from the University of Chicago in 1978. He taught at the University of New Orleans for 29 years and has been in the Department of Psychology at Clemson University since 2007. Since 1981 he has taught human sexuality to over 60,000 students. Professor King is senior author of Human Sexuality Today (9th ed., King & Regan, Pearson) and Statistical Reasoning in the Behavioral Sciences (7th ed., King, Rosopa, & Minium, John Wiley & Sons). He has published nearly 90 research papers on obesity, human sexuality, and sexuality education. Professor King is a Fellow in the American Psychological Association, Association for Psychological Science, and the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society, and is an honorary member of the Golden Key National Honor Society for excellence in teaching. References * Year of birth missing (living people) Living people University of Chicago alumni Sex educators American psychologists "
"David E. Simon (born 1961/1962) is an American billionaire real estate developer, chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) of Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group, an S&P; 500 company and the largest U.S. publicly traded real estate company. Early life and education Simon is the son of Jewish American real estate developer and founder Melvin Simon and his first wife Bess (née Meshulam).Indianapolis Star: "Simon’s daughter sues widow over will - Complaint says billionaire’s 2nd wife coerced him into signing new estate plan favoring her" by John Russell Estateofdenial.com, January 9, 2010 He obtained a B.S. degree from Indiana University in 1983 and an M.B.A. from Columbia University's Graduate School of Business in 1985. Career Simon started his career at First Boston. From 1988 to 1990, he worked at Wasserstein Perella & Co. as a vice president. In 1990, he joined Simon Property precursor Melvin Simon & Associates as Chief Financial Officer. In 1993, he led the efforts to take Simon Property Group public with a nearly $1 billion initial public offering that, at the time, was the largest real estate stock offering. He became CEO in 1995 and Chairman in 2007. He is a former chairman of the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT) leadership team and is a former trustee of the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC). In 2000, he was inducted into the Indiana University Kelley School of Business Academy of Alumni Fellows. Philanthropy In 2013, he donated $5 million support the construction Columbia Business School's new facilities. Personal life In 1986, he married Jacqueline Susan Freed. They have five children.Indianapolis Business Journal: "Simon Property CEO uses hard-nosed style to excel at acquisitions" by Cory Schouten Ibj.com, March 6, 2010Jewish Federation of Greater Indianapolis: "The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Dedicates Simon Family Dormitory at New Scopus Student Village - Hebrew U Recognizes the Generosity of Family Behind Simon Property Group" Jfgi.org August 22, 2007 References Place of birth missing (living people) Living people American chief executives Jewish American philanthropists American billionaires Indiana University alumni Columbia Business School alumni 1960s births Simon family (real estate) Simon Property Group people "
"The Centers for Space Oceanography (CSO) are an operating division of the Argos Foundation, Inc. CSO was established in August 2004 by a Memorandum of Understanding between the Argos Foundation, the Florida Aerospace Finance Corporation, the Florida Space Research Institute, and North American CLS, Inc. While operating under the corporate umbrella of the Argos Foundation, an executive appointee from each of the founding organizations form the Steering Committee of CSO. The first Chairman of the Steering Committee was Stephen Lee Morgan; the first Executive Director of CSO was Lawrence M. Harvey. In December 2005, NACLS withdrew from the Steering Committee, and was replaced by Gladius, LLC. CSO exists to develop and operate "data fusion" capabilities involving the observation of the Earth's oceans from space, and tracking items (ranging from man-made assets such as ships, to marine mammals and other animals) from space, enabling researchers to examine and understand the relationship of such "mobiles" with respect to physical oceanographic elements (such as currents, waves, ocean temperature gradients, etc.). Working with a number of Industrial Team partners, CSO and its associated university and agency researchers develop capabilities, which are then made available to the general public at no charge or at cost. Regionally specific affiliated centers are established to focus attention and resources upon a given region on the Earth's surface. The first such regional center was the Caribbean Center for Ocean Management & Research, established in Florida in 2006. On 31 January 2006, CSO conducted its First CSO Symposium at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, hosting over 30 attendees from Government, universities, U.S. Federal and Florida agencies, and Industrial Team executives."Monitoring the Seas from Space" (NASA press release, February 16, 2006) CSO continues as a division of the not-for-profit Argos Foundation, while the affiliated regional centers are established as separate legal entities controlled by CSO, but in some cases are for-profit organizations. References External links *Argos Foundation *Caribbean Center for Ocean Management & Research Oceanography "