
TL;DR
This paper features an interview with Ingram Olkin, highlighting his extensive contributions to statistics, education, and his professional leadership, reflecting on his career and impact in the field.
Contribution
It provides a detailed personal and professional account of Ingram Olkin's life, career, and influence in statistics and education, which is a unique biographical perspective.
Findings
Olkin's leadership in statistical journals and societies.
His contributions to educational statistics and research.
Recognition through major awards and honors.
Abstract
Ingram Olkin was born on July 23, 1924 in Waterbury, Connecticut. His family moved to New York in 1934 and he graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School in 1941. He served three years in the Air Force during World War II and obtained a B.S. in mathematics at the City College of New York in 1947. After receiving an M.A. in mathematical statistics from Columbia in 1949, he completed his graduate studies in the Department of Statistics at the University of North Carolina in 1951. His dissertation was written under the direction of S. N. Roy and Harold Hotelling. He joined the Department of Mathematics at Michigan State University in 1951 as an Assistant Professor, subsequently being promoted to Professor. In 1960, he took a position as Chair of the Department of Statistics at the University of Minnesota. He moved to Stanford University in 1961 to take a joint position as Professor of…
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