From the Author:
From Michael: It was an honor to co-edit this 3rd edition of the Encyclopedia with Saul Gass, a respected colleague, wonderful friend, and one of the pioneers of operations research and management science (OR/MS). I also recommend two of his other books, An Annotated Timeline of Operations Research: An Informal History, and Profiles in Operations Research: Pioneers and Innovators, as well as the Festschrift volume that I co-edited, Perspectives in Operations Research: Papers in Honor of Saul Gass' 80th Birthday, as nice complements to this Encyclopedia. A little bit more about Saul's background and intimate relationship with the development of the OR/MS field. Saul first served as a mathematician for the Aberdeen Bombing Mission, U.S. Air Force, and then transferred to Air Force Headquarters where he began his career in operations research with the Directorate of Management Analysis, the organization in which linear programming, one of the foundations of operations research, was first developed. For IBM, he was an Applied Science Representative, Manager of the Project Mercury Man-in-Space Program, and Manager of IBM's Federal Civil Programs. He was a member of the Science and Technology Task Force of the President's Commission on Law Enforcement. He was Director of Operations Research for CEIR, Senior Vice-President of World Systems Laboratories, and Vice-President of Mathematica. He has served as a consultant to the U. S. General Accounting Office, Congressional Budget Office, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and other operations research and systems analysis organizations. Included in his many publications are the textbooks Linear Programming (fifth edition) and Decision Making, Models and Algorithms, and the book An Illustrated Guide to Linear Programming. The two linear programming books are now available through Dover Publications.
About the Author:
Dr. Saul I. Gass received his Ph.D. in Engineering Science/Operations Research from the University of California, Berkeley, and his B.S. in Education and M.A. in Mathematics from Boston University. He was Professor Emeritus at the Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, College Park, where he was previously the Dean's Lifetime Achievement Professor and was named a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher. He served as president of the Operations Research Society of America (ORSA) and Omega Rho - the international operations research honor society, as vice-president for international activities of the Institute of Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS), and as vice-president of the International Federation of Operational Research Societies (IFORS). He is a recipient of ORSA's Kimball Medal for distinguished service to the society and the profession, INFORMS's Expository Writing Award for publications in operations research that have set an exemplary standard of exposition, and the Military Operations Research Society's Jacinto Steinhardt Memorial Award for outstanding contributions to military operations research. He was a Fellow of INFORMS and a Fulbright Research Scholar at the Computer and Automation Research Institution, Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
Dr. Michael C. Fu received his Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Harvard University and master's and bachelor's degrees in EECS and mathematics from MIT. Since 1989, he has been at the University of Maryland in the Robert H. Smith School of Business, where he is currently Ralph J. Tyser Professor of Management Science. Dr. Fu is a Fellow of IEEE and INFORMS. At the University of Maryland, he was a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher and received the Institute for System Research's Outstanding Systems Engineering Faculty Award and the Business School's Allen J. Krowe Award for Teaching Excellence. He has also served as Operations Research Program Director at the National Science Foundation.
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