| SPRING 2002 John Koehler 63, 68 PhD died of cancer December 14, 2001, at
the age of 60. In a wide-ranging career, he served as deputy director of the CIA and
founded the first company to offer two-way, high-speed Internet access via satellite.
Although declining health had forced Mr. Koehler to resign in 2000 from Tachyon Inc., the
data networking services company he launched in 1997, after the September 11th terrorist
attacks he offered his services to the government as an advisor. With his experience in
creating budgets for the governments intelligence-gathering functions, he was asked
to help develop the budget for the White House Office of Homeland Security. He filed what
became his final report three days before his death.
Born in Olympia, Washington, Mr. Koehler earned a scholarship to Yale, graduated summa cum
laude in 1963, and went on to earn a doctorate in economics. Recruited to work at the Rand
Corporation, he specialized there in national and international security. According to the
Los Angeles Times, Charles Wolf, the Rand senior economics adviser who hired Mr.
Koehler, said that he still marvels at Koehlers ability to elucidate an elaborate
World Bank forecasting model of the Indonesian economy by condensing 300 equations
into eight.
Mr. Koehler left Rand in 1975 to become assistant director of the Congressional Budget
Office, where he established the National Security and International Affairs division and
directed studies of U.S. defense policy. He served as a CIA deputy director and director
of the Intelligence Community Staff from 1978 to 1982, then joined Hughes Electronics,
later becoming president and chief executive of Hughes Communications. He helped that
company to launch DirecTV as a satellite broadcasting system, among other ventures. In the
1990s, he served as chief operating officer of the San Diego-based Titan Corp., maker of
satellite equipment for commercial and government customers.
He is survived by his wife, Susan, a daughter, two sons, his mother, and a sister and
brother.
Ian Livingstone 57 MA died September 14, 2001, at the age of
67. He was a development economist who prepared the first socio-economic development plan
for Cambodia, established an economics masters degree program at Makerere University
in Uganda, and performed numerous studies focusing on the improvement of human living
standards.
Mr. Livingstone, born in Paris of Scottish parents, was educated in Glasgow before coming
to Yale to earn a masters degree. His academic career began in 1958 in the fledgling
department of economics at Makerere University College in Uganda. He moved to Sheffield
University in 1961 to lecture in economic statistics, returning four years later to
Makerere to head the economics department, then to lead the economic research bureau at
the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. In 197475, as research professor in the
Institute of Development Studies at the University of Nairobi, he became interested in
pastoral communities and led irrigation development work in the Commonwealth Secretariat
Project in Tanzania; the three-volume report he generated remains a major reference work
in that field.
In 1978 Mr. Livingstone moved to the University of East Anglia, where he remained through
his retirement in 2000. During his time in the United Kingdom, his extensive public
service included membership in the Overseas Development Administrations economic and
social committee on research (197792) and the Commonwealth Scholarships Commission
(19952001).
Mr. Livingstone is survived by his wife, Grace, and four children.
SPRING 2003
Robert F. Bryan '39 PhD died on May 16, 2002, at the age of 89. He
was an economist with Lionel D. Edie & Co. from 193948, except during
194142, when he was with the U.S. Office of Price Administration. In 1948 he joined
J.H. Whitney & Co., becoming a partner in 1951. He also served as financial vice
president, treasurer, and director of Whitney Communications Corp. and as a partner in
Whitcom Investment Co. He was a member of the executive committee of the Yale Graduate
School Council from 196973 and a trustee of Oberlin College from 196070.
Carl P. Ciosek, Sr. '54 GRD died October 10, 2002, in Williston,
Vermont, at the age of 87. He served in the Air Force in Italy and Africa during World War
II and taught economics at the University of Connecticut following the war. Based on his
expertise in Russian and economics, he was recruited by the Central Intelligence Agency,
where he was a pioneer in tracking developments in cybernetics and economic planning.
Albert Cizaukas '57 MA died April 3, 2002 in Falls Church, Virginia,
at the age of 82. He served as an economics officer in the Foreign Service from the late
1940s until 1969, with postings in Asia and Europe. His final assignment was in Washington
doing debt rescheduling for Indonesia. At the World Bank from 1969 to 1982, he often
represented the bank at the Berne Union, the international trade association for the
export and investment insurance business.
C. Mario Cortes '62 MA died May 11, 2002, in Washington, DC, at the
age of 72. He taught economics in Chile before moving to the United States in the 1960s.
He earned a PhD in economics from Washington University in St. Louis and served as an
economist for the World Bank from 1974 to 1979.
John Charles Leary '45 BA, '59 MA died on August 8, 2002, at the age
of 78 in Alexandria, Virginia. From 1950 to 1988 he was an economics officer in the
Foreign Service and retired as chargé d'affaires at the US Embassy in Granada. He also
was a US representative to the UN Industrial Development Organization. He served in the
Army Air Forces in Europe during World War II as a fighter pilot and a flight instructor,
and his decorations included the Distinguished Flying Cross.
Harry B. Price '32 MA died on April 4, 2002, in Santa Fe at the age
of 97. In 1937 he became executive director of the Committee for Non-Participation in
Japanese Aggression, which persuaded Congress to prohibit the shipping of strategic
materials to Japan. In 1944 he began serving as deputy director of the UN Relief and
Rehabilitation Administration in China. Later he worked for the reconstruction of Europe
and Africa under the Marshall Plan, in the Phillipine rural reconstruction movement, and
as UN representative to Nepal from 195761. Beginning in 1970 he taught for 11 years
at Maryville College in Tennessee, where he became chairman of the Department of Economics
and Business. He was author of The Marshall Plan and Its Meaning (1955).
John Sumsion '53 MA died on February 21, 2003, in Rotherby, England,
at the age of 74. He was awarded the Order of the British Empire for his service to the
nation. He served as the first registrar of public lending right, the system in the UK
that pays authors when their books are borrowed from public libraries. He was later
director of the library and information statistics unit at Loughborough University.
Walt W. Rostow '36 BA, '40 PhD died on February 13, 2003, at the age
of 86. He served in the Office of Strategic Services during World War II and received the
Order of the British Empire. He joined the US State Department as assistant chief of the
German-Austrian Economic Division, and later taught history, first at Oxford and Cambridge
and then at MIT, establishing himself as a scholar of economic modernization. In the 1960s
he advised Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, becoming the latter's special assistant for
national security affairs. This post is now known as national security adviser. Long known
as one of the architects of the Vietnam War, Mr. Rostow supported the war on economic
grounds with the claim that it gave those Southeast Asian nations involved time to ward
off the possible consequences of Communist takeover, and to develop economically and
stabilize themselves. At the end of the Johnson Administration, Mr. Rostow resumed his
academic career at the University of Texas. In the early 1990s, he became head of the
Austin Project, an organization dedicated to expanding public and private programs
providing prenatal care and aid to disadvantaged children.
SUMMER 2004
Seymour T. Pearlman 48 MA died August 6, 2003, in Boca Raton,
Florida. He was a stock broker for over 50 years, primarily with First Albany Corporation.
He also taught at the University of Buffalo and Russell Sage College. Over the years he
served as president of numerous organizations, including the Albany Jewish Community
Council, the Albany Jewish Community Center, the Daughters of Sarah Jewish Nursing Center,
Gideon Lodge, Bnai Brith, and the Upstate New York Council of Bnai
Brith.
Howard S. Gordman 34 BA, 36 MA died March 1, 2004, in
Atlanta at the age of 93. After receiving his PhD in economics from the University of
Michigan, he taught at the College of William and Mary; Xavier University; the University
of Detroit; Southern Illinois University; LaGrange College, where he was head of the
economics department; and Georgia State University, where he served for 18 years. He was
president of the Southern Finance Association.
FALL 2005
Robert Allen Berry 70 PhD died December 20, 2004, at the age
of 66. He taught economics at the College of William and Mary until his retirement in
1995.
Basil Fuleihan 85 MA IDE, Lebanons former Minister of
Economy and Trade, died on April 18, 2005, in Paris as a result of injuries sustained in a
terrorist bombing in Beirut on February 14. He was 42. Mr. Fuleihan was part of the convoy
of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, which was attacked as it was returning from a
working session with the parliament. Mr. Hariri was killed immediately as a result of the
bombing, and Mr. Fuleihan sustained burns over 95% of his body. The blast killed 19 others
and wounded about 100. While he was hospitalized, a tent was set up on Beiruts
Martyrs Square for prayers for Fuleihan, who was a Protestant. Following his
education at Yale, Mr. Fuleihan earned a PhD in economics from Columbia University.
Elected member of parliament in 2000, he held several important positions, including
project manager for the United Nations Development Program and Minister of the Economy
between 2000 and 2003. He was also a professor in the department of economics at the
American University in Beurut between 1993 and 2000.
Orson H. Hart, Jr. 46 PhD died April 22, 2005, in Bethel,
Conn., at the age of 92. He began his career at the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company
and then went to Washington to work for the Office of Price Administration in the Raw
Materials Division. He also worked for Lionel Edie & Company, the Life Insurance
Association of America, and New York Life, where he was promoted to vice president and
director of economic studies.
John A. Henning 56 MA died December 24, 2004, at the age of
76. He served in the US Army Counter-Intelligence Corps from 1946-50 in Kobe, Japan. After
earning his PhD in economics from Cornell, he began a career teaching at Syracuse
University. He collaborated on pioneering research on the effects of air pollution on
housing values and on the prediction of government expenditures. He frequently testified
as an expert witness in state and federal courts.
Robert Johnston 65 PhD died September 23, 2004, in California
at the age of 72. He worked for 25 years at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco,
retiring in 1992.
Dallas L. Jones 56 MA died June 14, 2004, in Cape Cod at the
age of 89. A Navy veteran, he served on the battleship Nevada during the D-Day landings in
Normandy. After the war he earned a masters degree from Georgetown and joined the
Foreign Service. He served in Oslo, Paris, Madrid, and Geneva before returning to Paris
for six more years and becoming chairman of the economic development and review committee
of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. He later served on the
secretary of states policy planning staff in Washington and was instrumental in
launching the Group of Eight summits that meet annually.
Douglas Nadeau 63 MA died April 23, 2004, in Boston at the age
of 63. He earned a law degree from Harvard in 1966 and worked for Hale and Dorr in Boston
and then for Hogan & Hartson in Washington, DC. In the early 1970s, he became a
founding partner at Finnegan, Stanzler and Nadeau in Boston. He also organized several
state representative campaigns.
Park Seong-yawng 65 PhD died in May 2005 in San Francisco at
the age of 74. He was chairman of the Kumho-Asiana Group and a prominent patron of the
arts in Korea. He led several arts institutions, including the Seoul Arts Center and the
Tongyeong International Music Foundation, and he established the Kumho String Quartet. In
2004 he was the first Korean to receive the Montblanc Arts Patronage Award.
Lois Ernstoff Stekler 68 PhD died November 24, 2004, in
Bethesda, MD.
Hildreth T. Winton 32 MA died August 30, 2004, in New Haven at
the age of 96. He began his career as assistant secretary for the American Institute of
Accountants. With his wife he founded and operated the Oronoque Orchards in Stratford for
the next 30 years. He was a veteran of World War II.
FALL 2006
Joel B. Dirlam 36 BA, 47 PhD died at the age of 90 in
Kingston, Rhode Island, on December 1, 2005. During World War II, he spent two years in
the army in France and Germany. Upon his return, he became professor of economics at
Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, Cornell, Connecticut College for Women, the University
of Connecticut, Michigan State University, and the University of Rhode Island. He was a
frequent guest lecturer at the University of Aix-en-Provence, France, and an authority on
the economics of Yugoslavia. He served as a consultant for the Brookings Institute and the
New England fishing industry, published several books on economics, and spent a year in
Jordan as economic advisor to the king on the development of the Jordanian economy.
Stephen P. Dresch 70 PhD died on August 6, 2006, in Hancock,
Michigan, at the age of 63. He taught successively at Yale, Rutgers, and Southern
Connecticut State College. After establishing the Institute for Demographic and Economic
Studies in New Haven, he served as economic advisor to several presidents. He was dean and
professor in the School of Business and Engineering Administration at Michigan
Technological University.
Frank M. Kibler Sr. 39 Grd died in Atlanta, Georgia, on
November 8, 2005, at the age of 87. He had been president of FeatherCraft, an aluminum
boat manufacturer.
Robert W. Kilpatrick 58 MA, 65 PhD died on October 13,
2005, in Washington, DC. From 1962 until 1971, he taught economics at Cornell University,
after which he became a fiscal economist in the U.S. Office of Management and Budget,
where he received the Distinguished Service Award in 1994.
Charles P. Larrowe 52 PhD died at the age of 90 in East
Lansing, Michigan, on July 7, 2006. During the early years of World War II, he served as
an ambulance driver in North Africa, and enlisted as a flamethrower once the United States
entered the war, eventually receiving a Purple Heart and a Silver Star for valor. After
leaving Yale, he taught at the University of Washington, the University of Utah, and
Michigan State University. A member of the ACLU and the NAACP, he championed civil rights
and the rights of workers to organize for over sixty years.
Henry W. Moore 52 MA died September 11, 2006, in Sandwich, New
Hampshire, at the age of 88. He was a signal officer during World War II, and eventually
served as flight and squadron commander of the active Air Force Reserve until 1969. Early
on, he worked for Fanny Mae Mortgage and the Republican National Committee, writing
speeches for President Eisenhower and other Republicans. He later taught at the University
of Maryland and worked for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce before being appointed economic
advisor to the U.S. Congress.
Oliver L. Robinson 53 MA died on January 13, 2006 in Grand
Rapids, Michigan, aged 77. Upon his retirement from banking in 1982, he sailed the inner
coasts for three years on a converted trailer.
Gary R. Saxonhouse 64 BA, 71 PhD died on November 30,
2006, at the age of 63 in Seattle, where he was being treated for leukemia. He had taught
at the University of Michigan since 1970, with scholarly research focused on the Japanese
economy, international trade, economic history and economic development. He held a number
of prestigious fellowships (Guggenheim, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral
Sciences, Bellagio Center, National Endowment for the Humanities) and advisory roles (U.S.
Departments of State, Treasury, Commerce, and the World Bank), and also served as a staff
member on the Presidents Council of Economic Advisors. He returned to Yale in recent
years to participate in alumni conferences in Economics (April 1999) and East Asian
Studies (November 2003).
Sheldon Schaffer 47 MA died on April 13, 2006, at the age of
83 in Birmingham, Alabama. He served with the 709th Tank Battalion during World War II. He
was head of the economics department of the Southern Research Institute for more than two
decades, writing numerous reports on the economic and political future of Birmingham. He
was a member of the American Civil Liberties Union for 53 years and founded Or Hadash (New
Light), the first humanistic Jewish Congregation in Birmingham.
Michael H. Styles 61 Grd died on April 5, 2006, in Fairfax
Station, Virginia, at the age of 79. In 1949, he joined the State Department and
subsequently served five years at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo. In 1960, he became director
of the State Departments Office of Aviation, where he worked to remove barriers to
the overseas operation of U.S. airline companies. He received the Meritorious Honor Award
and Superior Honor Award from the State Department and retired in 1979, forming a
consulting company to represent the interests of international aviation. He also founded
the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at George Mason University. He wrote a biography of
his adventurous ancestor, titled Captain Hogan: Sailor, Merchant, Diplomat on Six
Continents (2003).
WINTER 2008
John Buttrick 50 PhD died on July 16, 2007, in a car accident
on Gabriola Island, British Columbia. He was 88. He was a professor of economics at York
University, Toronto for nearly two decades. Not wanting to retire at the age of 65,
Buttrick and six others successfully took legal action to fight Yorks mandatory
retirement policy, and he remained on the York faculty until 1989. While in Toronto he
worked as a consultant for the Ontario Economic Council, focusing on social issues
including inner city educational inequities and the out-migration of skilled workers. He
had previously been a faculty member at the University of Minnesota and at Northwestern:
his move to Canada in 1970 was sparked by frustration with U.S. foreign policy. Buttrick
also served as a visiting professor at universities around the globe, and he continued
this practice well into his retirement. In 1989, he and his wife moved to Jamaica where he
became an advisor to the government and a teacher at the technical university. According
to York Universitys Y-File, "He was a fearless and long-time fighter for
peace, a conscientious objector in the Second World War, and actively helped a large
number of refugees from the Vietnam draft and more recently deserters from the U.S.
military service in Iraq." The Buttricks had only recently settled in Gabriola, a
retirement community for intellectuals and artists.
Edward Gramlich 65 PhD died on September 5, 2007, in
Washington, DC of leukemia at the age of 68. A former governor of the Federal Reserve, he
had issued an early warning about the need for more oversight of home loans. At the time
of his death he was a senior fellow at the Urban Institute. He was named to the Federal
Reserve by President Clinton in 1997 and served until 2006. In his role as chairman of the
Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation, he lobbied unsuccessfully for legislation to
protect consumers from predatory lending practices. He proposed solutions for the mortgage
crisis in his book, Subprime Mortgages: Americas Latest Boom and Bust, which
was published in June. He also headed the Air Transportation Stabilization Board, formed
by Congress after the September 11 terrorist attacks. In a controversial move he twice
voted with other board members to reject loan packages for United Airlines, convinced that
United could restructure without federal help. During his career he held posts in the
academic world as well as in government. He served as deputy and acting director of the
Congressional Budget Office, and at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor as professor
of economics, head of the universitys public institute, and interim provost. He
maintained a lifelong interest in baseball, directing an economic study commission on
Major League Baseball in 1992.
Norman H. Leonard 47 PhD died on September 5, 2007, in
Delaware, Ohio, at the age of 89. He was a professor emeritus of economics at Ohio
Wesleyan University and the sixth faculty member to win the universitys Welch
Meritorius Teaching Award, established in 1963. He was also widely known as an expert
witness in court trials involving damage amounts sought by accident victims and their
families. In 1942, after serving four years as an Army officer, he became a junior
economist with the Office of Price Administration. He was the co-author of a book on
forensic economics and several textbooks. A past president of the American Society of
Econometric Appraisers, he also served on numerous boards, including the board of the
American Civil Liberties Union.
Charles Montrie 62 PhD died on June 9, 2007, in his home in
Potomac, MD. He was 83. He worked for the State Department for most of his career, and was
one of the first staff members of what would become the U.S. Agency for International
Development. As an economist for USAID he served in the Near East and South Asia. After
retiring in 1980, he became a certified financial planner and a real estate agent. During
WWII he was as an ensign in the U.S. Navy, stationed aboard the destroyer USS Newcomb in
the South Pacific, and was awarded a purple heart. He enjoyed gardening, woodworking, and
traveling. |