Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Anita Arrow Summers (September 9, 1925 – October 22, 2023) was an American educator of public policy, management, real estate and education and was a professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Biography [ edit ]

  2. Oct 26, 2023 · Anita A. Summers, an economist at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania who injected quantitative rigor into a wide variety of public policy topics, including zoning, education...

  3. news.wharton.upenn.edu › in-memoriam › 2023Anita Arrow Summers - News

    Nov 3, 2023 · Anita Arrow Summers. It is with great sadness that the Wharton School announces the passing of Anita Arrow Summers, an emeritus professor of economics who became a leading expert in public policy and a trailblazer for women in the field. Summers died October 22, 2023, at her home in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania, after a short illness.

  4. May 13, 2022 · To describe Wharton professor emeritus Anita Summers as a trailblazer would be an understatement. Born in 1925 to a banker father and homemaker mother who always emphasized the importance of education, Summers embarked on a career in economics when few women dared and even fewer could.

  5. Sep 4, 2001 · Anita Arrow Summers, an emeritus professor of economics in the Wharton School and a leading expert in public policy, died on October 22 after a short illness. She was 98. Born in Great Neck, Long Island, to immigrants from Romania, and raised in Manhattan, Dr. Summers was born in 1925.

  6. Anita Arrow Summers, an emeritus professor of economics in the Wharton School and a leading expert in public policy, died on October 22 after a short illness. She was 98. Born in Great Neck, Long Island, to immigrants from Romania, and raised in Manhattan, Dr. Summers was born in 1925.

  7. Oct 23, 2023 · It is with great sadness that the Department of Economics notes that Anita Arrow Summers passed away on October 22, 2023. Anita received a B.A. in Economics from Hunter College in 1945 and an MA from the University of Chicago in 1947.