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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:23 2006 |
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----------------- HES POSTING -----------------
[From EH.News.]
In Memoriam. Adam Klug
Adam Klug was a brilliant young Israeli economic historian who recently
passed away well before his prime. We at Rutgers were fortunate to have him
with us for four years in the early 1990s. (He was a visitor in the
International Finance Section at Princeton for two years and a visiting
professor at Rutgers for two years). Adam's field of interest was financial
history and he published several important articles on German Reparations
and Sovereign Debt default in the 1930s, as well as an article on the Suez
crisis of 1956. He collaborated with Michael Bordo on a project on the
Sterling crisis of 1967 and Eugene White on leading indicators of the Great
Depression in the US, with Doug Irwin on the political economy of Tariffs,
and with others. These papers will be published in the future. What was so
special about Adam was his intellectual curiosity, and his broad range of
expertise. He kept coming up with the most interesting and arcane data and
ingenious hypotheses on important issues. His signature in his years in New
Jersey was a heavy green tweed sport jacket, white (sort of) shirt and
nondescript tie, which he wore regardless of the season, and an old leather
briefcase which was always overflowing with a good fifty pounds of tomes
from the Princeton Library. We will miss him.
Michael Bordo
Hugh Rockoff
Eugene White
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