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Topic: Will Keith Kellogg


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  NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Will Keith Kellogg
Will Keith Kellogg, usually referred to as W. Kellogg, (April 7, 1860 and#8211; October 6, 1951) was a U.S. industrialist in food manufacturing.
Kellogg is recognized as the founder of Kellogg College, Oxford.
Kellogg Kollege is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Will-Keith-Kellogg   (1152 words)

  
 The Scripps Research Institute - News and Views
Later is his address, Kelly officially announced the naming of the TSRI graduate college the Kellogg School of Science and Technology in "recognition of Jean and Keith Kellogg's commitment to education and science and their generous support of science education at The Scripps Research Institute, in California, and in the state of Illinois...
Keith Kellogg is the retired chairman of General Packaging Products, a small, Chicago-based company founded by his father, John Kellogg, who pioneered the use of waxed paper in 1915.
Keith Kellogg spent many of his formative years in a cereal factory, working for his grandfather, Will Keith Kellogg, inventor of the corn flake and founder of Kellogg Company, today the world's leading cereal producer.
www.scripps.edu /newsandviews/e_20020520/commence.html   (1053 words)

  
  Inventor of the Week: Archive
Kellogg was educated as far as the sixth grade.
His older brother John Harvey Kellogg was a doctor, rising to the rank of physician-in-chief at a world-famous local hospital and health spa called the Battle Creek Sanitarium.
Kellogg retired as the company's president in 1929 but stayed on as chairman of the board until 1946.
web.mit.edu /invent/iow/kellogg.html   (695 words)

  
 Will Keith Kellogg
Will Kellogg was bookkeeper and manager of the world-famous hospital.
Will and John developed San Health Foods in an attempt to improving the vegetarian diet of the San's patients.
K Kellogg believed that “dollars have never been known to produce character, and character will never be produced by money.” Based on this belief none of his children would become wealthy by inheritance.
people.uncw.edu /fischettij/cheryl.htm   (290 words)

  
 W. Keith Kellogg II; quiet philanthropist for medicine, education | The San Diego Union-Tribune
The Kelloggs' support for the Cal Poly campus stemmed from W.K. Kellogg's ownership of the original land, on which he bred the third-largest collection of Arabian horses in the nation.
Kellogg was spending time playing jazz saxophone at the Carlton Hotel in Philadelphia when his grandfather suggested that he go to Chicago to help with his father's business.
Kellogg's father died in 1950, the John and Helen Kellogg Foundation was established.
www.signonsandiego.com /uniontrib/20050922/news_1m22kellogg.html   (1059 words)

  
 They’re Grrrrreat! - Food for Thought by Mark Vogel - Atlantic Highlands Herald - NJ
Kellogg was appointed the superintendent of a sanitarium in Battle Creek, Michigan.
Will Keith Kellogg (1860-1951), better known as W.K. Kellogg, was the younger brother of Dr. John Harvey Kellogg and a clerk in the Battle Creek sanitarium.
Kellogg however, is the most famous since it is he who began the Kellogg’s company in 1906.
www.ahherald.com /food/2003/ft_030320_kelloggs.htm   (894 words)

  
 Will Keith Kellogg Breaking News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-07)
Will Keith Kellogg was born in Battle Creek Mich U.S. industrialist and philanthropist.
Will Keith Kellogg was born in Battle Creek Will Keith Kellogg.
Will Kellogg eventually went to work at the every day for nearly a century was Will Keith Kellogg born on April in Battle Creek the Battle Creek Sanitarium.
www.110top.revealedtips.info /will/will-keith-kellogg.htm   (293 words)

  
 Will Kellogg: King of Corn Flakes   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-07)
Kellogg was at home whether he was lecturing to an audience of lay people at the San or discussing surgical techniques with the finest physicians in Europe.
As Will rose from errand boy to corn-flake king to world philanthropist, the one constant in his life was his rivalry with his brother.
Will countered in 1910 with a lawsuit, claiming that J.H. was infringing on the brand name and confusing consumers.
www.libertyhaven.com /thinkers/willkellogg/willkellogg.html   (3466 words)

  
 Inventor Will Keith Kellogg Biography
Will Keith Kellogg, creator of the cereal company and the foundation that bears his name, led three professional "lives" while making his mark on Battle Creek, Michigan and the world.
Kellogg demonstrated great compassion and caring and acted on his belief that the most good came from helping people to help themselves--giving them the opportunity to do what is important to them.
John Henry Kellogg and his little brother Will Keith played out one of the most dramatic and bitter family feuds in American history, but for twenty years before their split they were partners.
www.ideafinder.com /history/inventors/kellogg.htm   (1424 words)

  
 UK News : Kellogg’s under fire for cereal contents
Kellogg’s was founded in the 19th-century by Will Keith Kellogg, a business manager of a sanatorium in Michigan, US.
Kellogg’s does not hide the fact that there is a difference between the salt and sugar levels of some of its cereals in Britain and America.
Kellogg’s is one of the most powerful food companies in the world with annual sales of about £5.5bn with 40 cereals sold in 160 countries.
www.keralanext.com /news/?id=888908   (528 words)

  
 Historic Notes and News - Part 1
Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Michigan, which materialized its appreciation of dental service to the public by an appropriation of nearly half a million dollars to be used for erecting a building to be known as the W.
Kellogg, in establishing the foundation, gave serious thought to the character of health welfare philanthropy that would be of the most good to the greatest number.
He will be engaged in a study of tissue metabolism fundamental to cancer, under the auspices of a grant from the National Advisory Cancer Council made to the department of biochemistry.
www.fluoride-history.de /notes-1.htm   (4145 words)

  
 TSRI - Giving To Scripps Research
Janet ("Jean") R. Kellogg and her late husband W. Keith Kellogg II have made extraordinary contributions to health care, science, and education for many years.
The Kelloggs' generous support has resulted in the recognition of the graduate program as one of the most respected in the country.
The Kelloggs established a charitable remainder trust in which Jean and their beneficiaries receive fixed annual payments, with Scripps Research receiving the remainder of the assets after the trust is dissolved – a win-win for all.
www.scripps.edu /philanthropy/kellogg.html   (183 words)

  
 CSU Newsline - Cal State San Marcos to Name Library After Philanthropists Jean and W. Keith Kellogg   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-07)
California State University San Marcos President Alexander Gonzalez announced today that the library under construction on campus will be named for Rancho Santa Fe philanthropists Jean and W. Keith Kellogg II, pending approval by the CSU Board of Trustees.
In addition, the Kelloggs have donated generously to the President's Discretionary fund, which is used for a variety of priority projects.
Keith Kellogg II is the grandson of the cereal company founder.
www.calstate.edu /newsline/Archive/02-03/020830-SM.shtml   (518 words)

  
 Will Keith Kellogg Information
Will Keith Kellogg, usually referred to as W.
Kellogg, (April 7, 1860 – October 6, 1951) was a U.S. industrialist in food manufacturing.
Kellogg is recognized as the founder of Kellogg College, Oxford.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Will_Keith_Kellogg   (130 words)

  
 Adventist Review: The Legacy of the California Kellogg
Kellogg asked when she had said that, and he said he thought it had been about two years before.
Kellogg hadn't heard of her having made that statement, so he decided to write and ask James and Ellen White to come to St. Helena and see the place.
Kellogg went to the St. Helena train station on the specified date, and asked the conductor if there was a sick man on the train.
www.adventistreview.org /2004-1536/story3.html   (1811 words)

  
 BBC News | Education | Snap, crackle and cash
Kellogg College, an Oxford college which specialises in part-time courses, is to receive a £6m private donation to fund its plans for expansion.
The grant from the WK Kellogg Foundation will allow the college to find larger premises and meet the growing demand for part-time degrees and adult education.
Among the students who will benefit from the injection of cash is Neil Hawkes, headteacher at West Kidlington Primary School and Orchard Meadow First School in Oxford, who is beginning his fourth year of a D Phil in educational studies.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/hi/education/191751.stm   (319 words)

  
 Welcome to Kellogg's Australia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-07)
Although Will Keith and John Harvey were aware that they had invented a good-tasting food that was easy to prepare, they had no way of knowing that they had also invented a new industry.
Kellogg manufacturing facilities were built in Sydney, Australia in 1928; and in Manchester, England in 1938.
Kellogg will continue to enjoy strong opportunities for growth as it meets the demand for ready-to-eat cereals in international markets as well as in the United States.
www.kellogg.com.au /DisplayPage.asp?PageID=414§ionid=2   (1219 words)

  
 Kellogg Company: Bringing Our Best To You For 100 Years Celebration
Will Keith (W.K.) Kellogg, was born April 7, 1860.
Kellogg continued to expand into new markets, exporting cereal to England in the early 1920s and later building a plant in Sydney, Australia.
Kellogg even went into outer space, as part of the Apollo 11 space crew's breakfast during their historic mission to the moon in 1969.
www.kellogg100.com /history.html   (1439 words)

  
 USNews.com: Utopia in a cereal bowl; measuring ingredients
Will, who assisted his big brother at "the San," as the spa was known, accidentally left a pot of boiled wheat soaking overnight.
He was less concerned with sexuality than was Graham, but he also believed the high-protein American diet, heavy on meat, eggs, butter, sugar, and whiskey or ale, was causing an epidemic of illnesses: "dyspepsia," or acid indigestion, constipation, and "auto-intoxication," or the growth of bacteria in the colon due to lack of fiber.
Kellogg made and popularized "nut butters," including peanut butter, as a substitute for "cow butter." He also created America's first meat substitute, from flour, water, and steamed peanuts.
www.usnews.com /usnews/culture/articles/050815/15health_print.htm   (816 words)

  
 Kellogg Company -- Company History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-07)
Kellogg is a global company committed to building long-term growth in volume and profit and to enhancing its worldwide leadership position by providing nutritious food products of superior value.
Will Keith Kellogg once estimated that 42 cereal companies were launched in the breakfast-food boom during the early years of the 20th century.
Gutierrez's vision for Kellogg was "to begin a process of renewal designed to strengthen significantly the ability of the Kellogg Company to compete and prosper in the 21st century." His new team included eight new top executives, including four who joined the company in 1999 and 2000.
www.fundinguniverse.com /company-histories/Kellogg-Company-Company-History.html   (5073 words)

  
 W.K. Kellogg Foundation: Founder - Who We Are
Will Keith Kellogg was born April 7, 1860, to Michigan pioneer parents.
Later, he would point out that he was “the seventh son, born on the seventh day of the week, on the seventh day of the month.” But from his youth, W.K. relied on hard work, instead of fate or destiny, to make his way in the world.
The Kellogg Company was started in 1906, after W.K. parted ways with his brother, (who didn’t see the market potential of breakfast cereal).
www.wkkf.org /default.aspx?tabid=63&ItemID=3&NID=37&LanguageID=0   (575 words)

  
 Excite -
Will Keith Kellogg invented Corn Flakes, and the modern breakfast cereal, after experimenting with flaked wheat berries in the kitchen of his brother's Battle Creek health sanitarium.
Kellogg went on to become the world's leading cereal producer, leading the pack in marketing innovations such as product giveaways and color magazine advertising.
Kellogg found itself locked in battle with General Mills and Post (a subsidiary of Philip Morris), forcing the firm to cut cereal prices by 19 percent.
www1.excite.com /home/careers/company_profile/0,15623,1321,00.html   (1019 words)

  
 PolyCentric - Cal Poly Pomona
Keith Kellogg II is the namesake and grandson of cereal magnate W.K. Kellogg, one of the university's primary founders.
In the 1930s, W. Keith Kellogg II began his career by working for his grandfathers cereal business, the Kellogg Co. His father, John Kellogg, ran the packaging operation in Battle Creek, Mich., and asked if the younger Kellogg would go to Chicago and repair several divisions of the firm that were going bankrupt.
Kellogg is survived by his wife, Janet; son, Will Keith Kellogg III; and daughter, Joanne Kristine Beverlin, as well as numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
polycentric.csupomona.edu /news.asp?id=1005   (422 words)

  
 Kellogg's interactive
The Kellogg Company is one of the few successful food businesses in the world that can trace its origin back to a philosophy that urged people to improve their health by changing their eating habits.
The company's founder, Will Keith Kellogg, believed that diet played an important role in a healthy lifestyle and that breakfast was the most important meal of the day.
From 1876 W.K.'s brother, Dr. John Harvey Kellogg, was superintendent of the San and part of W.K.'s role was to develop grain based foods that would be nutritious and palatable for patients.
www.kelloggs.ie /history/foundations.asp   (182 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Will Keith Kellogg
Will Keith Kellogg, usually referred to as W.
Kellogg (April 7, 1860 – October 6, 1951) was a U.S. industrialist in food manufacturing.
Kellogg is recognized as the founder of Kellogg College, Oxford.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Will_Keith_Kellogg   (432 words)

  
 Battle Creek
http://www.kelloggs.com/ considers Will Keith Kellogg to be the founder.
Will Keith and John Harvey Kellogg were children by his second wife, Ann Janette Stanley.
His brother Will Keith (who had been trained as a broom maker) worked at the Sanitarium where he helped create health foods for the patients.
home.comcast.net /~james.kellogg/ATT/battlecreek.html   (811 words)

  
 scary squirrel world - BREAKFAST CERAL AND SQUIRRELS   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-07)
Will was originally a stockboy and a broommaker.
From there, Will's fortunes changed for the better until, as noted by Patriot Puss above, he fell into the clutches of squirrel world domination; brought the tree demons to his estate in Battle Creek; and the rest is history...
While Will may have turned away from the skwerl side in the end, it still remains a matter of open debate whether the breakfast cereal industry continues to promote squirrel world domination.
www.scarysquirrel.org /history/kellogg   (819 words)

  
 Michigan Historical Marker: W. K. Kellogg / Kellogg Company
Kellogg's early personal philanthropies included assistance to rural teachers, to British children orphaned by war, to the blind and to a number of hospitals and medical programs.
In 1930 the W. Kellogg Foundation was established to promote the health and well-being of children.
Kellogg Company sold more than one million cases of cereal in 1909, and by 1911 the company's advertising budget had reached $1 million.
www.michmarkers.com /Pages/S0541.htm   (289 words)

  
 Antonino Carrubba: Cal Poly Pomona
They are the descendants of the historically famous horses acquired and bred in the mid-1920s by university founder Will Keith Kellogg.
Kellogg offered to donate 200 acres for an emergency landing field if Lindbergh would fly over the ranch and circle the proposed landing field.
In 1932, at the age of 72, Kellogg decided to donate his ranch to the State of California on the condition that the property be used for educational purposes, and that his Arabian horses would continue to be shown.
home.att.net /~acarrubba/Htm_Pages/calpoly.htm   (1215 words)

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