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Charnes, A. (Abraham), 1917-1992

LC control no.n 79145548
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingCharnes, A. (Abraham), 1917-1992
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Variant(s)Charnes, Abraham, 1917-
Charnes, Abraham, 1917-1992
Birth date1917-09-04
Death date1992-12-19
Place of birthHopewell (Va.)
Place of deathAustin (Tex.)
Field of activityManagement science
AffiliationCarnegie Institute of Technology
Purdue University
University of Texas at Austin
Profession or occupationCollege teachers Mathematicians
Found inCooper, W. W. An introduction to linear programming, 1953.
The University of Texas at Austin Index of Memorial Resolutions and Biographical Sketches, via WWW, April 13, 2015 (Abraham Charnes; professor emeritus of management science and information systems, died on December 19, 1992; Professor Charnes was born on September 4, 1917 in Hopewell, Virginia; he received bachelor's, master's, and Ph. D. degrees from the University of Illinois in 1938, 1939, and 1947, respectively; Dr. Charnes taught at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, and Purdue and Northwestern Universities; at Northwestern he was Walter P. Murphy Professor of Applied Mathematics; Professor Charnes joined The University of Texas at Austin in 1968; he held the Jesse H. Jones Professorship and was a University System Professor; he was later named John P. Harbin Professor in the College of Business Administration; Professor Charnes was an internationally renowned authority in developing new and advanced mathematical methods used for management problem solving in government, industry, engineering, and medicine; he published more than 200 articles in professional journals and coauthored seven books; one of his best known works was An Introduction to Linear Programming; another publication, Management Models and Industrial Applications of Linear Programming, was translated into Czechoslovakian; in 1975 Professor Charnes was a finalist for the Nobel Prize in economics)
Annals of operations research, 1997: volume 73, issue 0, page 389-391 (In memoriam, Abraham Charnes, 1917-1992; internationally acclaimed mathematician Abraham Charnes died in Austin, Texas on December 19, 1992 at the age of 75; known as a pioneer of operations research and one of the great figures in management science, Dr. Charnes' fundamental contributions in engineering optimization, statistics, finance, marketing, and human resource management spanned a fifty-year career; Charnes was director of the Center for Cybernetic Studies and the John P. Harbin Professor Emeritus at The University of Texas at Austin)
Associated languageeng