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Kettering College (formerly Kettering College of Medical Arts) is a private Adventist college in Dayton, Ohio. The college is owned by the Kettering Medical Center and chartered by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. The college was built in 1967 next to the Charles F. Kettering Memorial Hospital.
At Antioch College, the 1929 Science Building he donated [33] was not named after him (it is now the Arts and Science Building), [34] but the school's 33.000-square-foot Charles F. Kettering Building was (the same being originally a research facility, now home to campus radio station WYSO), [35] while the college's Olive Kettering Library was ...
The Charles F. Kettering House is located on Kettering's west side, on a hill overlooking the grounds of both Kettering College and Kettering Medical Center. It is a large Tudor Revival structure, originally designed by the Dayton firm of Schenck & Williams and built in 1914. The original building was destroyed by fire in 1995 and was rebuilt ...
Master's university 2,942 1911 Ohio Northern University: Ada: Private not-for profit Baccalaureate college 3,695 1871 Ohio State University [16] Columbus: Public Doctoral/highest research university 58,322 1870 Ohio Technical College: Cleveland: Private for-profit Associate's college 1,500 1969 Ohio Wesleyan University: Delaware: Private not ...
Kettering Health Main Campus, formerly known as Kettering Medical Center (KMC), [1] is a faith-based, nonprofit hospital located in Kettering, Ohio, United States. Founded in 1964, it is the flagship hospital of the Kettering Health , and is directly affiliated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church . [ 2 ]
Kettering is a city in Montgomery County, Ohio, United States. It is an inner suburb of Dayton . As of the 2020 census , the city had a population of 57,862, making it the most populous suburb in the Dayton metropolitan area .
Kettering University undergraduate students must complete at least five co-op terms to graduate. [4] Kettering University is named after inventor and former head of research for General Motors, Charles F. Kettering. He was a distinguished inventor, researcher, and proponent of cooperative education. [5]
Kettering was the first individual contributor to the Fraze Pavilion project, which created an outdoor performance space in Kettering, Ohio, [7] a suburb of Dayton named after Kettering's father-in-law. Gifts to the University of Dayton and Wright State University exceeded $16.5 million during Kettering's lifetime. [5]