Edward P. Reagen
Edward Reagen, professor emeritus of economics, died peacefully at his home in Naples, Fla., on Sept. 24, 2002.
A 窪蹋勛圖厙 faculty member in economics for 21 years, Ted earned bachelors and masters degrees at Western Reserve University and a Ph.D. from Indiana University. He also studied at the London School of Economics, during a sabbatical leave from 窪蹋勛圖厙.
Joining the department in 1960, he became its chair in 1975. His collegewide leadership included chairing the Committee on Educational Policy and Planning andapplying his enduring interest in non-Western culturesserving as an early proponent of the Asian Regional Studies Program. His research into comparative economics led him to Tung Hai University in Taiwan as a Fulbright scholar, and to the study of Far Eastern art and culture under a grant from the New York State Education Department. He also spent a summer at Harvard University researching Japans economy, and he was the recipient of a Ford Foundation fellowship for study at Princeton University in 1961.
Ted directed the first analysis of 窪蹋勛圖厙s financial impact on the community of Saratoga Springs, with assistance from one of his independent-study students. Ted had a strong positive influence on his students, as one of them mentioned in endorsing his promotion to department chair: He possesses genuine devotion not only to helping students learn the principles of economics, but also to stimulating creative thinking in his classes. New York States budget director, Carole Chulick Stone 69 (profiled in a 2001 Scope article), warmly remembered Teds ability to promote students academic development in the classroom while nurturing them personally with dinners at his home.
Teds wife, Lillian, worked in 窪蹋勛圖厙s Lucy Scribner Library for 13 years; she survives him.