Operations Research 50th Anniversary Issue (March 22, 2002)

Author List

- Kenneth J. Arrow, Stanford University (Nobel Prize in Economics, 1972): Optimal Inventory Policy

- Robert E. Bixby, Rice University: Solving Real-World Linear Programs

- Alfred Blumstein, Heinz School of Public Policy and Management of Carnegie Mellon University: Crime Modeling

- Seth Bonder, Chairman and CEO (retired), Vector Research, Inc.: Army Operations Research

- William W. Cooper, Graduate School of Business of the University of Texas at Austin: Industrial Uses of Linear Programming

- George Dantzig, Professor Emeritus, Stanford University: Linear Programming - How It Began

- Stuart Dreyfus, Professor Emeritus of the University of California at Berkeley: The Birth of Dynamic Programming

- Charles D. Flagle, Professor Emeritus, Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health: Operations Research in Health Services

- Saul I. Gass, Professor Emeritus, Robert H. Smith School of Business and Management, University of Maryland, College Park: The First Linear Programming Shoppe

- Denos Gazis, PASHA Industries: The Origins of Traffic Theory

- Ralph Gomory, President, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation: Early Integer Programming

- K. Brian Haley, University of Birmingham: OR in Great Britain

- William W. Hogan, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University: Energy Modeling for Policy Studies

- Charles C. Holt, Professor Emeritus, Red McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin: How to Plan Production, Inventories and Work Force

- Ronald A. Howard, Stanford University Graduate School of Business: Markov Decision Processes

- Wayne P. Hughes, Dean, Graduate School of Operational & Information Science, Naval Postgraduate School: Navy Operations Research

- James R. Jackson, Professor Emeritus, UCLA: How Networks of Queues Came About

- Samuel Karlin, Professor Emeritus, Stanford University: Interdisciplinary Meandering in Science

- Glenn Kent, RAND: Looking Back

- Leonard Kleinrock, UCLA Computer Science Department: Mathematical Theory of Computer Networks

- Harold M. Kuhn, Professor Emeritus, Princeton University: Being in the Right Place at the Right Time

- Richard C. Larson, Director, the Center for Advanced Educational Services, MIT: Public Sector Operations Research

- John D. C. Little, Institute Professor, MIT Sloan School: Philip M. Morse and the Beginnings of OR

- John F. Magee, CEO (retired), Arthur D. Little, Inc.: Operations Research at Arthur D. Little, Inc.

- Harry M. Markowitz, President, Harry Markowitz Co. (Nobel Prize in Economics, 1990): Efficient Portfolios, Sparse Matrices, and Entities: A Retrospective

- Richard E. Nance, Systems Research Center, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, and Robert G. Sargent, Professor Emeritus, Syracuse University: Evolution of Simulation

- The late Gordon Newell, University of California at Berkeley: Highway Traffic Flow Theory

- Howard Raiffa, Harvard Business School, and the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University: Decision Analysis: A Personal Account of How It Got Started and Evolved

- Herbert E. Scarf, Yale University: Inventory Theory

- Martin Shubik, Yale University: Game Theory and Operations Research

- Shaler Stidham, Jr., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Queueing Systems

- Harvey M. Wagner, the Keenan-Flagler Business School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: And Then There Were None

- Peter Whittle, Cambridge University: Applied Probability in Great Britain

The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS®) is an international scientific society with over 10,000 members dedicated to applying scientific methods to help improve decision-making, management, and operations. Members of INFORMS work in business, government, and academia. They are represented in fields as diverse as airlines, health care, law enforcement, the military, the stock market, and telecommunications. 2002 is the 50th anniversary of organized operations research in the United States. 1952 was the year that the journal Operations Research and the Operations Research Society of America, one of the founding societies of INFORMS, were born. The INFORMS website is at http://www.informs.org.