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・ Maxwell Henry Gluck
・ Maxwell Holt
・ Maxwell Hotel Cebu
・ Maxwell House
・ Maxwell House (disambiguation)
・ Maxwell House (Stedman, North Carolina)
・ Maxwell House Hotel
・ Maxwell House Show Boat
・ Maxwell Huckabee
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・ Maxwell James Grant Smart
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Maxwell K. Goldstein
・ Maxwell Kalu
・ Maxwell Khobe
・ Maxwell Knight
・ Maxwell Kofi Jumah
・ Maxwell Kogon
・ Maxwell Konadu
・ Maxwell L. Anderson
・ Maxwell Lake
・ Maxwell Land Grant
・ Maxwell Lock & Dam
・ Maxwell Lord
・ Maxwell M. Geffen
・ Maxwell M. Hamilton
・ Maxwell M. Rabb


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Maxwell K. Goldstein : ウィキペディア英語版
Maxwell K. Goldstein

Maxwell K. Goldstein (January 15, 1908 – February 18, 1980) was a first generation Jewish-American scientist and engineer who was instrumental in the development and deployment of high-frequency direction finding by the United States Navy during the Second World War. High-frequency direction finding (known as huff-duff or HF/DF) played a significant role in the Allies efforts to counter the threat of German U-boats (submarines) during the Battle of the Atlantic. This success helped ensure the continued flow of equipment and supplies from the United States to Britain and to European battlefields, which was a critical factor in the ultimate Allied victory. Following World War II, Goldstein founded Balco Research Laboratory, which specialized in high resistance capacitors used in numerous military, civilian, and NASA projects.
==Early years==

Maxwell Goldstein was born on January 15, 1908, to Bessie and Louis Goldstein, Jewish immigrants from Warsaw. He grew in Baltimore, MD, attending primary school at Clifton Park Junior High School and high school at Baltimore Polytechnic Institute.〔“His Life,” Maxwell K. Goldstein, accessed October 2, 2015, http://www.maxwellkgoldstein.com/his-life.〕 He received a Bachelor of Engineering degree from Johns Hopkins University in 1930, followed by his doctorate in electrical engineering in 1934. During his time at Johns Hopkins, he established a reputation as being particularly skilled with practical solutions to technical problems, particularly with regards to radio technologies.〔Williams, Kathleen Broome. (1996) "Secret Weapon: U.S. High‐Frequency Direction Finding in the Battle of the Atlantic." Naval Institute Press. ISBC 1-55750-935-2〕 From 1935-1937, he worked for the Air Navigation Development Board at the U.S. Army Air Force base at Wright Field (later Wright-Patterson Air Force Base), and then spent two years working for the Navigation Development Board of the Department of Commerce's Civil Aeronautics Authority. In 1939, he joined the Naval Research Laboratory.〔"Maxwell K. Goldstein," Engineering and Technology History Wiki, accessed October 2, 2015, http://ethw.org/Maxwell_K._Goldstein〕

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