De Veaux Named 2008 Statistician of the Year

Print Story | Email Story
WILLIAMSTOWN — Professor of statistics Richard D. De Veaux was named the 2008 Mosteller Statistician of the Year at an award ceremony on March 11.

The award is presented by the Boston Chapter of the American Statistical Association every year to a distinguished statistician who has made exceptional contributions to the field of statistics and has shown outstanding service to the statistical community.

The prize is named for Charles Frederick Mosteller, one of the most eminent statisticians of the 20th century, and founding chairman of Harvard's statistics department.

De Veaux's contributions to the field of statistics have been prodigious. His research focuses on data mining, its methodology, and its application to problems in science and industry, including artificial neural networks and advanced statistical techniques, including decision trees, MARS and boosting algorithms.

He joined the Williams College faculty in 1994.

He has also taught at the biometry unit of INRA (the French Agricultural Institute); the Probability and Statistics Laboratory in Toulouse, France; the UFR Biomedical

Department in Paris; and the Department of Operations Research and Financial Engineering at Princeton University, where he was the William R. Kenan Jr. Visiting Professor for Distinguished Teaching in 2006-07.

De Veaux is the co-author of a number of textbooks on statistics, including "Intro Stats," "Stats: Data and Models," and "Stats: Modeling the World." The textbooks are designed for reaching out to the "math-phobic." The journal American Statistician has called his work "accessible, non-threatening, and occasionally quite funny."

He holds a number of patents and has consulted with American Express, Bell Communications, First USA Bank, Merck Laboratories, and the National Security Agency among others. He is a fellow of the American Statistical Association.

He earned his undergraduate and bachelor of science in education in civil engineering from Princeton University in 1973, and his doctorate from Stanford University in 1986.

Before coming to Williams, De Veaux held posts at Princeton and the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Theater Review: 'Driving Miss Daisy' Is a 'Wondrous' Production

By Alan PetrucelliSpecial to iBerkshires
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Alfred Uhry's "Driving Miss Daisy" rolled into the St. Germain Stage in late May, marking the opening of Barrington Stage Company's 2026 season.
 
And what a wondrous, welcoming production it is. Uhry won a Pulitzer Prize for his work; he won an Oscar for the 1989 film adaptation of the play, which also won the Best Picture Oscar. Yes, that's how good it is.
 
Daisy Werthan is a 72-year-old white Jewish widow in Atlanta whose car accident destroyed her Packard — and her chance to ever drive herself again.
 
"Mama, we are just going to have to hire someone to drive you," her adult son Boolie tells her. 
 
She is adamant: "What I do not want — and absolutely will not have — is some chauffeur sitting in my kitchen, gobbling my food and running up my phone bill."
 
Enter Hoke Colburn, an unemployed African-American illiterate who grew up in rural Georgia during the Jim Crow-era South. Boolie hires him at $20 a week, and in a span of 85 minutes and a decade or so, this odd couple develop a tight bond that overcomes their cultural, gender and class differences. 
 
Though she's living in a racially explosive time in the South, the irascible Miss Daisy doesn't consider herself racist, nor does she fully accept the realities of the racist culture that has even resulted in a bombing at her own synagogue (a true event in Atlanta, in 1958).
 
View Full Story

More Williamstown Stories