Saturday, October 24, 2020

October 24: 6,161 New COVID 19 Cases in Illinois

Illinois health officials report 63 new deaths, 6,161 confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Saturday

CORONAVIRUS

Posted: Oct 24, 2020 / 02:14 PM CDT / Updated: Oct 24, 2020 / 09:28 PM CDT

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CHICAGO — The Illinois Department of Public Health reported 6,161 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the state on Saturday, including 63 additional deaths.

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 370,194 cases, including 9,481 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois.

The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from Oct. 17 – Oct. 23 is 6.1%. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 83,517 specimens for a total of 7,196,855.

The deaths were reported in the following counties:


  • Winnebago County: 1 female 80s

As of Friday night, 2,616 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 560 patients were in the ICU and 222 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

Above is from:  https://www.mystateline.com/health/coronavirus/illinois-health-officials-report-6161-cases-of-covid-19/

New Rules for Mitigation for Region 1

Pritzker: Additional restrictions for Illinois’ Region 1 to begin this Sunday

LOCAL NEWS

by: WTVO

Posted: Oct 22, 2020 / 02:01 PM CDT / Updated: Oct 22, 2020 / 05:08 PM CDT

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BELLEVILLE, Ill. (WTVO) — Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker announced Thursday that additional coronavirus mitigation restrictions for Region 1 will go into effect Sunday, October 25th.

Region 1 includes Boone, Carroll, DeKalb, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, Whiteside and Winnebago counties.

“Over the last few weeks, Region One has continued to see a surging positivity rate, now up to 11.9% as of this morning,” Pritzker said. “We’ve said all along that if things don’t turn around in a region after two weeks of resurgence mitigations, we may need to add more stringent measures to help usher in the progress that we need to see, to get things more open again eventually.”

Bars and Restaurants

  • Reduce party size from 10 to six individuals

Meetings, Social Events and Gatherings

  • Maximum indoor/outdoor gathering size of 10 individuals
    • Applicable to professional, religious, cultural and social group gatherings
    • Not applicable to students participating in-person classroom learning
    • This does not reduce the overall facility capacity dictated by general business guidance, such as office, retail, etc.
    • Not applicable to sports, see sports guidance

Indoor recreation

  • Maintain lesser of 25 people/25 percent of capacity
  • No groups more than 10 individuals
  • Does not apply to fitness

The existing mitigations that were already put in place in early October will remain.

“There is no easy fix to this. So as colder weather comes upon us and brings flu season, along with it, it’s imperative that we take extra caution and extra care. Because at the end of the day this is bigger than you. This is about all of us, and the communities that we call home,” the governor said.

Individual counties rolling 7-day positivity rate as of Thursday:
Boone: 15.9% (15.7% yesterday)
Carroll: 10.6% (11.6% yesterday)
DeKalb: 9.3% (8.2% yesterday)
Jo Daviess: 10.4% (9.6% yesterday)
Lee: 11.5% (11.1% yesterday)
Ogle: 10.2% (10.2% yesterday)
Stephenson: 9.1% (9.2% yesterday)
Whiteside: 11.9% (11.6% yesterday)
Winnebago: 13% (12.8% yesterday)

“I urge people in Region 1 to look at their activities and what they can do to reduce spread.  Consider postponing having people over to your home for a celebration, make sure you are distancing from other people, and wear your mask anytime you’re around others,” said Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike.

Pritzker also said the Illinois State Police will issue citations to businesses which do not comply with the executive order, and the state will look at revoking liquor and gaming licenses.

He also said he will be asking State’s Attorneys to help bring bars and restaurants into compliance.

“Stop trying to find a flaw in the data,” Pritzker said. “Bars and restaurants are top places where spreading takes place”

Illinois’ Region 5 started enhanced mitigation today after a surge in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.

The Illinois Department of Public Health today reported 4,942 new confirmed cases of coronavirus in Illinois, including 44 additional deaths.

– Carroll County: 1 female 90s
– Christian County: 1 male 90s
– Clay County: 1 female 70s
– Cook County: 1 male 40s, 1 male 50s, 3 females 80s, 1 male 80s, 2 females 90s, 1 male 90s
– DeWitt County: 1 male 70s
– DuPage County: 1 male 40s, 1 female 80s
– Effingham County: 1 male 90s
– Jefferson County: 1 male 80s
– Kane County: 1 female 70s
– Knox County: 1 female 70s, 1 male 70s, 1 female 80s, 1 female 90s
– LaSalle County: 1 female 80s
– Marion County: 1 female 90s
– McDonough County: 1 male 70s
– Peoria County: 1 female 90s
– Randolph County: 1 female 80s
– Richland County: 1 male 80s
– Sangamon County: 1 female 80s
– Shelby County: 1 male 70s
– St. Clair County: 1 male 90s
– Tazewell County: 1 female 60s, 1 female 70s, 1 male 70s
– Wayne County: 1 male 80s
– White County: 1 female 80s
– Winnebago County: 1 female 50s, 1 male 50s, 2 male 70s, 1 female 80s, 3 males 80s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 360,159 cases, including 9,387 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years.  The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from October 15 – October 21 is 5.7%.  Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 80,977 specimens for a total of 7,031,082.  As of last night, 2,463 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19.  Of those, 525 patients were in the ICU and 212 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilator

Above is fromhttps://www.mystateline.com/news/local-news/live-gov-pritzker-gives-daily-coronavirus-update-for-thursday-october-22nd/

The rules under Region 1 Mitigation

As detailed in the July 15 Restore Illinois resurgence plan, Tier 2 mitigations may be applied if a region’s positivity rate remains above the 8 percent positivity threshold after 14 days under Tier 1 mitigations. If a region continues to experience a sustained resurgence of COVID-19 after 14 days with Tier 2 mitigations in place, stricter measures may be necessary to curtail further spread. Regions experiencing a sustained resurgence of COVID-19 after 14 days in Tier 1 mitigations will operate under these Tier 2 mitigation requirements:

SETTING MITIGATION REQUIREMENTS

Bars • All bars close at 11pm and may reopen no earlier than 6am the following day • No indoor service • All bar patrons should be seated at tables outside • No ordering, seating, or congregating at bar (bar stools should be removed) • Tables should be 6 feet apart • No standing or congregating indoors or outdoors while waiting for a table or exiting • No dancing or standing indoors • Reservations required for each party • No seating of multiple parties at one table • No tables exceeding 6 people *

 Restaurants • All restaurants close at 11pm and may reopen no earlier than 6am the following day • No indoor dining or bar service • Tables should be 6 feet apart No standing or congregating indoors or outdoors while waiting for a table or exiting • Reservations required for each party • No seating of multiple parties at one table • No tables exceeding 6 people *

 Meetings, social events and gatherings (including weddings, funerals, potlucks, etc.) • Limit to 10 guests in both indoor and outdoor settings * • Applicable to professional, cultural and social group gatherings. • Not applicable to students participating in-person classroom learning, sports or polling places. • This does not reduce the overall facility capacity dictated by general business guidance such as office, retail, etc. • No party buses •

Gaming and Casinos close at 11:00pm, are limited to 25 percent capacity, and follow mitigations for bars and restaurants, if applicable Organized group recreational activities (including sports, but excluding fitness centers*) • Limit to lesser of 25 guests or 25% of overall room capacity both indoors & outdoors * • Groups limited to 10 or fewer people * • All Sports Guidance effective August 15, 2020, remains in effect • Outdoor Activities (not included in the above exposure settings) continue per current DCEO guidance *

DENOTES NEW MITIGATION TO TIER 2 Tier 2 Resurgence Mitigations tt In addition,

IDPH recommends the following actions be taken: • Display prominent masking and distancing signage • Discourage non-essential travel to other states and international locations • Discourage groups greater than 4 individuals in ages 12 -17 from congregating outside of school • Promote work from home when possible IDPH will continue to track the positivity rate in regions requiring additional mitigations over a 14-day monitoring period to determine if mitigations can be relaxed, if additional mitigations are required, or if current mitigation should remain in place. If the positivity rate averages less than or equal to 6.5 percent over a 3-day period, the region will return to Phase 4 mitigations under the Restore Illinois Plan. If the positivity rate averages between 6.5 percent and 8 percent, IDPH will continue to monitor the region to determine if additional mitigations are needed. If the positivity rate averages greater than or equal to 8 percent after 14 days, more stringent mitigations may be applied to further reduce spread of the virus, which could include reducing capacity on organized group recreation, fitness or other activities supported by local contact tracing and outbreak data and temporary suspension of certain activities. Follow the latest regional metrics at: https://dph.illinois.gov/regionmetrics. For more information on guidance for businesses, please visit the FAQ on DCEO's website.

Above is from:  https://dceocovid19resources.com/assets/Restore-Illinois/Tier-2-COVID-19-Resurgence-Migitations.pdf

U.S. sets single-day record with over 83,000 new coronavirus infections



There are new signs that the nation's monthslong battle against the coronavirus is moving in a dangerous direction. There were more than 83,000 confirmed cases reported Friday, marking a new record high for a single day in the country.

The outbreak is also more widespread. The latest surge is pushing the number of infections to more than 8.4 million and increasing the death toll past 223,000 people, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Another dire warning Friday from Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease doctor. It came the same day 41 states reported an increase in average new cases. Fifteen states also showed record hospitalizations, indicating more precautions are needed — fast.

"We're not talking about shutting down, but we're talking about doubling down on some of the fundamental public health measures we need to adhere to," Fauci said on MSNBC.

On Friday, one Tennessee county has made masks mandatory and health officials in Florida discouraged birthday parties for kids after a Sweet 16 party spread the virus. "We know that about 30 kids participated from more than one high school," said Dr. Raul Pino, the health director in Orange County.

Some sport team members and the Association of American Medical Colleges called for a coordinated national testing program. "With routine testing, we can find a place and find individuals who are infected faster and make sure we isolate them until they are no longer contagious," said Heather Pierce, a senior director with the association.

In Wisconsin, the state with the biggest surge, politics may be getting in the way of safety.

The Democratic governor, Tony Evers, can't convince the Republican legislature to meet and help him impose stricter safety measures. "It is now 188 days since the legislature last met and things aren't getting any easier," Evers said in a briefing this week.

In one Indiana county where church gatherings spread the virus, the country health commission had to explain why a crackdown is important. "If our cluster analysis also showed that car dealerships and smoothie shops and the mall were identified as common sources of exposure, we would also be reaching out to them," said Dr. Mark Fox, the deputy health director of St. Joseph County.

For its part, the federal government appears to be focusing its efforts on developing COVID-19 vaccines and treatments. The FDA for the first time officially approved a COVID-19 drug, the anti-viral remdesivir on Thursday.

Both AstraZeneca  & Johnson & Johnson's vaccine trials resumed Friday after it was determined volunteers' illnesses were not caused by the drugs. But, in waiting for a cure, having to report the latest terrible facts in Illinois brought the state's director of public health to tears.

"Since yesterday we lost an additional 31 lives, for a total of 9,418 deaths. These are people who started with us in 2020, and won't be with us at the Thanksgiving table," said Dr. Ngozi Ezike, the state's top doctor.

With a vaccine unlikely to be widely available before the holidays, health experts say masks and social distancing remain the best way to stop the spread of the virus. A new report from researchers at the University of Washington said wearing face masks in public could save 63,000 lives in the U.S. this winter.

Above is from:  https://www.cbsnews.com/news/coronavirus-pandemic-us-most-new-infections-single-day-covid-19/

Trump COVID Plan?

Biden Trolls Trump With New COVID Website

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Hanna Trudo

Updated Oct. 23, 2020 3:26PM ET / Published Oct. 23, 2020 3:22PM ET

EXCLUSIVE

Saul Loeb/Getty

Joe Biden wants the very online crowd to know that Donald Trump does not have a pandemic plan.

At least, that’s the pitch the Democratic nominee’s campaign is making through a gag website, TrumpCovidPlan.com, their newest digital endeavor to one up the president on the virus. The homepage opens to a signature “Not Found” greeting used for defunct or broken pages with the adjoining message: “The Trump plan to defeat the coronavirus and reopen safely does not exist.” A URL below the introductory text allows viewers to “Learn More” by redirecting to a blend of anti-Trump talking points, scientific data, and a selection of the president’s tweets and reported remarks minimizing its harm, with a tally of known United States deaths on the corresponding days. A background graphic features a moving red line showing dips and spikes.

“Donald Trump has had eight months to use science, public health, and the power of the Presidency to reopen safely and save American lives. But we are barely better equipped to manage the COVID-19 threat today than we were eight months ago. Donald Trump has failed to lead and Americans are paying for it with their lives,” the site reads.

Open Letter: 779 Economists Oppose Trump's Re-Election


More than 700 economists, including seven Nobel winners, urged US voters not to reelect President Donald Trump on Election Day.

As of Friday, the open letter, which is being updated until November 3, had been signed by 727 prominent economists from major institutions across America, including the Nobel winners Paul Milgrom, Oliver Hart, and George Akerlof.


Open Letter: 779 Economists Oppose Trump's Re-Election

NOTE: Institutions are listed for identification purposes and should not be viewed as signatories to the letter.

We, the undersigned economists, strongly urge voters not to re-elect Donald Trump on the following grounds:

  • His chaotic and ineffective approach to negotiation has damaged relations with trade partners, interrupted supply chains, degraded international norms, and harmed American farmers -- all without achieving his stated goal of reducing the trade deficit. Even his landmark trade deal, the USMCA, is not projected to have a meaningful impact on either GDP or the trade deficit.

  • His managerial incompetence has damaged the credibility and effectiveness of the public sector. Agencies cycle through acting heads, disgruntled former staffers frequently appear in the media with dire warnings, and family members are put in charge of critical pandemic response initiatives.

  • He claimed to have the unique ability to generate growth (in real GDP) of between 4% and 6%, but never surpassed 2.9% in his first three years in office. Furthermore, analysts at Goldman Sachs and Moody’s Analytics have projected that Joe Biden’s economic plans, if implemented, would actually generate faster growth in both employment and real GDP.

  • He failed to achieve his campaign’s core economic promises: manufacturing remained a small share of employment, and both the fiscal and trade deficits increased. As economists explained in 2016, most of his promises either didn’t make sense or weren’t achievable using his proposed policies. This remains true in 2020.

  • His administration’s public health response to COVID-19 was described by medical scientists as having turned "...a crisis into a tragedy" and as having underperformed relative to other democracies by "orders of magnitude."

  • He has consistently undermined the independence and credibility of our major health agencies, including the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control, and the National Institutes of Health, eroding public trust in their approvals and recommendations at exactly the time when we most desperately need it.

  • He has dramatically overemphasized the extent to which economic growth and public health are in conflict during a pandemic. In fact, many countries that have been more effective in their viral containment efforts have also performed better economically.

  • His personal behavior during the COVID-19 outbreak endangered public health, the economic recovery, and the safe re-opening of schools. He undermined mask use and social distancing, held indoor rallies, encouraged the use of unproven and potentially dangerous medical substances, downplayed the severity of the pandemic, and hosted a superspreader event that incapacitated the White House and forced military leadership into quarantine.

  • He regularly spreads dangerous misinformation, even during times of crisis, and has been the single largest source of misinformation during the pandemic.

  • He has made the country less attractive to skilled and hard-working immigrants by assaulting religious freedom and by insinuating that the children of non-white immigrants are not truly American.

  • He has made the country a less appealing place to do business by creating an atmosphere of perpetual chaos and uncertainty, and by using the levers of government to punish individuals and businesses that were insufficiently reverential.

  • He has fostered a culture of unabashed corruption by pressuring foreign countries to undermine his political opponents, using the resolute desk to promote a political supporter’s bean products, attempting to divert intergovernmental meetings to his commercial properties, using public resources to conduct campaign events, and allowing White House staff to openly flout the Hatch Act.

  • He has refused to release his tax returns -- unlike his political opponents in both 2016 and 2020 -- making it difficult to determine the extent to which his financial interests conflict with the country’s. Recent reporting, which has secured his returns for two decades, suggests that his businesses have consistently claimed large losses and that he appears to have many unresolved conflicts of interest.

  • He spreads conspiracy theories that undermine long-term trust in democratic institutions for seemingly no reason other than to influence media coverage in a single news cycle.

  • He has a poorly-informed, zero-sum view of economics that engenders needless viciousness and cruelty.

In just one term in office, Donald Trump has rendered the United States unrecognizable, and has faced no consequences for doing so. He has carried out a sustained assault on democratic institutions, put his family members in charge of critical government functions during a pandemic, called for his political opponents to be thrown in prison, normalized corruption, and weakened the economic recovery with selfish and reckless behavior. For these reasons, we strongly recommend that the electorate do what no one else can: reclaim your democracy by voting to remove Donald Trump from office.

Henry J Aaron, The Brookings Institution
Alberto Abadie, MIT
Soofi Abdol, School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Platteville
Teshome Abebe, Eastern Illinois University 
Ryan Abman, San Diego State University
Rahi Abouk, William Paterson University
Joelle Abramowitz, University of Michigan
David Abrams, University of Pennsylvania
Jason Abrevaya, University of Texas, Austin
Daron Acemoglu, MIT
Sara Adler-Mandelbaum, Western Governor's University
Anat R Admati, Stanford University
Amanda Agan, Rutgers University 
Dennis J. Aigner, University of California, Irvine
Ugur Aker, Hiram College
George Akerlof, Georgetown University
Stefania Albanesi, University of Pittsburgh
Randy Albelda, University of Massachusetts Boston 
Jim Albrecht, Georgetown University
Harold Alderman, IFPRI
Treb Allen, Dartmouth College
Andres Almazan, The University of Texas at Austin
Douglas Almond, Columbia University
Titan Alon, University of California, San Diego
Neil Alper, Northeastern University 
Rosanne Altshuler, Rutgers University
Nurul Samiul Aman, University of Massachusetts Boston
Pedro Amaral, California State University, Fullerton
Axel Anderson, Georgetown University
Kathryn H. Anderson, Vanderbilt University
James E. Anderson, Boston College
Robert M Anderson, University of California, Berkeley
Victor William Ribeiro Andrade, University of Kansas
Donald W K Andrews, Yale University
Jasmin Ansar, Mills College
Ian Appel, Boston College
Andres Aradillas-Lopez, Pennsylvania State University 
Eren Arbatli, NRU Higher School of Economics
Ken Ardon, Salem State University
Matteo Arena, Marquette University
Mary Arends-Kuenning, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Costas Arkolakis, Yale University
Boragan Aruoba, University of Maryland
Michael Ash, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Vidya Atal, Montclair State University
Susan Averett, Lafayette College
Ruediger Bachmann, University of Notre Dame
M. V. Lee Badgett, Amherst, MA
Erol Balkan, Hamilton College
Laurence Ball, Johns Hopkins University
Suman Banerjee, Stevens Institute of Technology
Victoria Baranov, The University of Melbourne
Robert J. Barbera, Johns Hopkins University 
Bradford Lewis Barham, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Bill Barnes, University of Portland
William A. Barnett, University of Kansas
Christopher B. Barrett, Cornell University
Dominick Bartelme, University of Michigan
Karna Basu, Hunter College & CUNY Graduate Center
Bharati Basu, Central Michigan University
Michael Bates, University of California at Riverside
Natalie Bau, UCLA
Reagan Baughman, University of New Hampshire 
Robert Baumann, College of the Holy Cross
Neal Becker, University of Pittsburgh
Jere R Behrman, University of Pennsylvania
Marc F. Bellemare, University of Minnesota
C. Lanier Benkard, Stanford University
Alan M. Benson, University of Minnesota
Antonio M Bento, University of Southern California
Youssef Benzarti, University of California, Santa Barbara
Julia Berazneva, Middlebury College
Berenbeim, Stern School of Business Administration, New York University
Dirk Bergemann, Yale University
Peter Bergman, Columbia University
Ted Bergstrom, University of California Santa Barbara
Kevin Berry, University of Alaska Anchorage
Marianne Bertrand, University of Chicago
David Besanko, Northwestern University
Michael Carlos Best, Columbia University
Syon Bhanot, Swarthmore College
Saurabh Bhargava, Carnegie Mellon University
V Bhaskar, University of Texas at Austin
Joydeep Bhattacharya, Iowa State University
Timothy Bianco, Allegheny College
Joerg Bibow, Skidmore College
Herman J. Bierens, Pennsylvania State University
Saki Bigio, UCLA
Richard E. Bilsborrow, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Emily Blanchard, Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College
David Blanchflower, Dartmouth College
Emily Blank, Howard University
Francine D. Blau, Cornell University
Jason R. Blevins, Ohio State University
Jesse Blocher, Vanderbilt University 
Steven Block, Tufts University
Barry Bluestone, Northeastern University
Randy Bluffstone, Portland State University
Andreas Blume, University of Arizona
Luigi Bocola, Stanford University
Martin Boileau, University of Colorado
Gary Bolton, University of Texas at Dallas
Alessandro Bonatti, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Philip Bond, 
Carl Bonham, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Severin Borenstein, University of California, Berkeley
Luca Bossi, University of Pennsylvania
Nathan Sivers Boyce, Willamette University
Gale A. Boyd, Duke University
W. David Bradford, University of Georgia
William Brainard, Yale University
Daniel Brent, Penn State University
Wyatt Brooks, Arizona State University
Christina Brown, UC Berkeley
Clair Brown, University of California, Berkeley
Sandro Brusco, Stony Brook University
Kevin Bryan, University of Toronto
Kasey Buckles, University of Notre Dame
Marguerite Burns, University of Wisconsin
Benjamin Bushong, Michigan State University 
Kristy Buzard, Syracuse University
Tilman Bögers, University of Michigan
Trudy Ann Cameron, University of Oregon
Donald Edward Campbell, The College of William and Mary
Gerard Caprio, Williams College
Geoffrey Carliner, Boston University
Christopher Carpenter, Vanderbilt University
Michael Carter, UMass Lowell
Michael R Carter, University of California, Davis
John Cawley, Cornell University
Stephen Cecchetti, Brandeis University
Ujjayant Chakravorty, Tufts University
Frank Chaloupka, University of Illinois at Chicago
David A. Chapman, University of Virginia
Kalyan Chatterjee, The Pennsylvania State University
Joyce J. Chen, The Ohio State University
Howard Chernick, Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City Univ of NY
Ron Cheung, Oberlin College
Judith Chevalier, Yale School of Management
Rachel G. Childers, Presbyterian College
Barry R. Chiswick, George Washington University
Bhagwan Chowdhry, UCLA
Abdur Chowdhury, Marquette University
Tim Classen, Loyola University Chicago
Kimberly Clausing, Reed College
Daniele Coen-Pirani, University of Pittsburgh
Sarah Cohodes, Teachers College, Columbia University
Matthew T. Cole, California Polytechnic State University
Robert Collinson, University of Notre Dame
Jonathan Colmer, University of Virginia
Jonathan Conning, City University of New York
Patrick Conway, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Karen Conway, University of New Hampshire
Jason Cook, University of Utah
Thomas Cooley, New York University
Hope Corman, Rider University
Donald Cox, Boston College
Stuart V. Craig, University of Pennsylvania
Peter Cramton, University of Maryland
Carolyn Craven, Middlebury College
Elizabeth Crowell, University of Michigan—Dearborn
J David Cummins, Temple University
Scott Cunningham, Baylor University
David M Cutler, Harvard University
Jamshid Damooei, California Lutheran University
James Dana, Northeastern University
Shooshan Danagoulian, Wayne State University
Betty C Daniel, University at Albany
Andrew Daughety, Vanderbilt University
Dhaval Dave, Bentley University
Thomas Davidoff, University of British Columbia
Donald R. Davis, Columbia University
James DeVault, Lafayette College
Robert T. Deacon, University of California, Santa Barbara
Joyee Deb, Yale University
Tatyana Deryugina, University of Illinois
Olivier Deschenes, University of California, Santa Barbara
Jerome Detemple, Boston University
Michael DiNardi, University of Rhode Island
Peter Diamond, MIT
Ranjit S. Dighe, SUNY Oswego
Taryn Dinkelman, University of Notre Dame
Rebecca Dizon-Ross, University of Chicago
Matthias Doepke, Northwestern University
Kevin Donovan, Yale University
Coleman Drake, University of Pittsburgh
Thomas Drennen, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Scott Dressler, Villanova University
Steven J. Dundas, Oregon State University 
Steven N. Durlauf, University of Chicago
Prajit Dutta, Columbia University
Susan Dynarski, University of Michigan
Richard A. Easterlin, University of Southern California 
Jonathan Eaton, Pennsylvania State University
Richard Eckaus, MIT
Eric Edmonds, Dartmouth College
Kevin Egan, University of Toledo
Barry Eichengreen, University of California, Berkeley
Robert Elder, Beloit College
Sara Fisher Ellison, MIT
Alice Ellyson, University of Washington, Seattle Children's Research Institute
Adem Y. Elveren, Fitchburg State University
Can Erbil, Boston College
Christopher Erickson, University of California, Los Angeles
Keith Marzilli Ericson, Boston University
Bilge Erten, Northeastern University
Hadi Salehi Esfahani, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Jose-Antonip Espin-Sanchez, Yale University
David Evans, University of Oregon
Piotr Evdokimov, Higher School of Economics
Ray Fair, Yale University
David Fairris, University of California, Riverside
Steven Fazzari, Washington University in St. Louis
Edgar Feige, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Raquel Fernandez, NYU
A. Nilesh Fernando, University of Notre Dame
Ricardo Fernholz, Claremont McKenna College
James Feyrer, Dartmouth College
Alexander J. Field, Santa Clara University
Andrew Fieldhouse, Middlebury College
Deborah M. Figart, Stockton University
Raymond Fisman, Boston University
Sean Flaherty, Franklin and Marshall College
Alfonso Flores-Lagunes, Syracuse University
Christina Fong, Carnegie Mellon University
Henrique Veras de Paiva Fonseca, Oberlin College
Jean-Jacques Forneron, Boston University
Lea Fortmann, University of Puget Sound
Cesare Fracassi, University of Texas at Austin
Johanna L Francis, Fordham University 
Jeffrey A. Frankel, Harvard University
Stephie Fried, Arizona State University
Leora Friedberg, University of Virginia
Amanda Friedenberg, University of Arizona
Daniel Friedman, University of California, Santa Cruz
Philip Friedman, Golden Gate University
Drew Fudenberg, MIT
Delia Furtado, University of Connecticut 
Stuart Gabriel, UCLA
David Galenson, University of Chicago
John Luke Gallup, Portland State University
H. Stephen Gardner, Baylor University
Michelle R. Garfinkel, University of California-Irvine
Claudine Gartenberg, University of Pennsylvania 
Martin Gaynor, Carnegie Mellon University
Laura Katherine Gee, Tufts University
Garance Genicot, Georgetown University
Jacqueline Geoghegan, Clark University
Christophre Georges, Hamilton College
James Gerber, San Diego State University
Mark Gertler, NYU
Jamshed Ghandhi, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Andra Ghent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Fabio Ghironi, University of Washington
Robert Gibbons, MIT
Thomas Gilbert, University of Washington
Kenneth Gillingham, Yale University
Osea Giuntella, University of Pittsburgh
Gopi Shah Goda, Stanford University
John Goddeeris, Michigan State University
Chuan Goh, University of Guelph
Amos Golan, American University
Devra Golbe, Hunter College
Robert S. Goldfarb, Professor of Economics (retired)
Claudia Goldin, Harvard University
Matthieu Gomez, Columbia University
Gloria Gonzalez-Rivera, University of California, Riverside
Allen C. Goodman, Wayne State University
Radhakrishnan Gopalan, Washington University in St. Louis
Robert J. Gordon, Northwestern University
Todd A. Gormley, Washington University in St. Louis
Nathaniel P Graham, Texas A&M International University
Corbett Grainger, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Wayne Gray, Clark University
Charles M. Gray, University of St. Thomas
Jerry R. Green, Harvard University
Stuart Greenbaum, Washington University, STL
Matthew Greenblatt, The College of New Jersey
Daniel Greenwald, MIT
Mark Greer, The College of William & Mary
Amanda Gregg, Middlebury College
Matthew Grennan, University of Pennsylvania
Erica L Groshen, Cornell University
Michael Grossman, City University of New York Graduate Center
Wayne A. Grove, Le Moyne College
Theodore Groves, University of California - San Diego
Martin J Gruber, NYU
Jonathan Gruber, MIT
Danilo Guaitoli, NYU
Arthur S Guarino, Rutgers University
Adam Guren, Boston University
Fatih Guvenen, University of Minnesota 
Nima Haghpanah, Pennsylvania State University
Philip A. Haile, Yale University
Thomas Hall, Christopher Newport University
George J Hall, Brandeis University
Bronwyn H Hall, University of California at Berkeley
John Halstead, University of New Hampshire
Winthrop Hambley, American University
Daniel S. Hamermesh, Barnard College, IZA and NBER
Sarah Hamersma, Syracuse University
Stephen F Hamilton, California Polytechnic State University
Ben Handel, Berkeley
Peter Reinhard Hansen, University of North Carolina
Bruce Hansen, University of Wisconsin
Oliver Hart, Harvard University
Tarek A. Hassan, Boston University
Jonathan Haughton, Suffolk University
Johannes Haushofer, Princeton University
George Hay, Cornell University 
Carolyn Heinrich, Vanderbilt University
Marc Henry, Penn State
Steve Henson, Western Washington University
Benjamin E Hermalin, University of California, Berkeley
Thomas Herndon, Loyola Marymount University
Joni Hersch, Vanderbilt University
Alexander Hill, Arizona State University
Keisuke Hirano, Pennsylvania State University
GĂĽnter J. Hitsch, University of Chicago
Jonas Hjort, Columbia University
Andrew Hobbs, University of San Francisco
Robert J Hodrick, Columbia Business School
Saul Hoffman, University of Delaware 
Stephen Holland, University of North Carolina Greensboro
Thomas J Holmes, University of Minnesota
Harry J. Holzer, Georgetown University
Roozbeh Hosseini, University of Georgia
Yasheng Huang, MIT Sloan School of Management
Timothy Hubbard, Colby College
Isaiah Hull, Senior Economist
Dan Hungerman, Notre Dame
Michael Mercier Hutchison, University of California, Santa Cruz
Johannes Hörner, Yale
Barry W. Ickes, Pennsylvania State University
Scott A Imberman, Michigan State University
Sarah Jacobson, Williams College
Sanford M. Jacoby, University of California, Los Angeles
Paul Andrew Jargowsky, Rutgers University - Camden
Elizabeth Jensen, Hamilton College
Michal Jerzmanowski, Clemson University
Charles Jeszeck, U.S. Government Accountability Office (ret.)
Saleha Jilani, Haverford College
Timothy C. Johnson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Derek C. Jones, Hamilton College
Martha W. M. Jones, Vanderbilt University
Paul L. Joskow, MIT
Theodore Joyce, Baruch College and Graduate Center, CUNY
Stephen D. Joyce, Drexel University
Kenneth L Judd, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
George Judge, UC, Berkeley
Fadhel Kaboub, Denison University
John Kagel, Ohio State University
John Kane, SUNY Oswego
Joseph Kane, UMass and Castleton universities
Cameron Kaplan, University of Southern California
J K Kapler, University of Massachusetts Boston
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Navin Kartik, Columbia University
Jakub Kastl, Princeton University
Lawrence Katz, Harvard University
Donald Keim, University of Pennsylvania
Peter Kelly, University of Notre Dame
Amir Kermani, University of California, Berkeley
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Pinar Keskin, Wellesley College
Michael Kevane, Santa Clara University
Farida Khan, University of Colorado Colorado Springs
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Jean Kimmel, Western Michigan University
Mary C King, Portland State University
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Henrik Kleven, Princeton University
Alvin K. Klevorick, Yale University
Catherine L. Kling, Cornell University and Atkinson Center for Sustainability
Tabitha Knight, Willamette University 
Christopher Knittel, MIT
Yilmaz Kocer, University of Southern California
Thomas Kochan, MIT
Niree Kodaverdian, Pomona College
Charles D. Kolstad, Stanford University and University of California
Gerald Kominski, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health
Andrew Kosenko, Marist College
Matthew Kotchen, Yale University
Dan Kovenock, Chapman University
Clemens Kownatzki, Pepperdine Graziadio Business School
Evan Kraft, American University
Adriana Kugler, Georgetown University
Michael Kuhn, University of Oregon
Mark Jeffrey Kuperberg, Swarthmore College
Mordecai Kurz, Stanford University
Jonathan L. Kurzfeld, Bates College
Paul R Kutasovic, New York Institute of Technology
Kenneth Kuttner, Williams College
Ilyana Kuziemko, Princeton University
David Laibson, Harvard University
Steven Landgraf, Virginia Military Institute
Farrokh Langdana, Rutgers Business School
Fabian Lange, McGill University
John Leahy, University of Michigan
Ronald D. Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Michael A. Leeds, Temple University
William H. Lehr, MIT
Dean Leistikow, Fordham University
Hayne E. Leland, University of California, Berkeley
Dan Levin, Ohio State University
David I. Levine, University of California, Berkeley
Arthur Lewbel, Boston College
Lynne Lewis, Elmer W. Campbell Professor of Economics, Bates College
Shengwu Li, Harvard University
Shanjun Li, Cornell University
Marc Lieberman, New York University
Ethan Ligon, University of California at Berkeley
Daniel Lin, American University
David L. Lindauer, Wellesley College
Barton Lipman, Boston University
Hong Liu, Washington University in St. Louis
Ted Loch-Temzelides, Rice University
Jason Long, Wheaton College
John Lopresti, William & Mary
Peter Lorentzen, University of San Francisco
Dukes Love, Williams College
Fernando Lozano, Pomona College
Sydney Ludvigson, New York University
Erzo F.P. Luttmer, Dartmouth College
Travis J. Lybbert, University of California, Davis
Victor Lyonnet, Ohio State University
W Bentley MacLeod, Columbia University
Jeffrey Macher, Georgetown (McDonough)
Catherine Maclean, Temple University
Ellen Magenheim, Swarthmore College
Marco Di Maggio, Harvard Business School
Michael Makowsky, Clemson University
Hazel Malapit, International Food Policy Research Institute 
Hani Mansour, University of Colorado Denver
Don Mar, San Francisco State University
Nelson C Mark, University of Notre Dame
Victoria Marone, University of Texas at Austin
Katalin Marton, Fordham University
Keith E Maskus, University of Colorado Boulder
Charles Mason, University of Wyoming
Victor Matheson, College of the Holy Cross
Laurent Mathevet, New York University
Jordan Matsudaira, Teachers College, Columbia University
Peter Hans Matthews, Middlebury College
Ryan S Mattson, West Texas A&M University
John W. Mayo, Georgetown University
Adam McCloskey, University of Colorado
K. John McConnell, Oregon Health & Science University
Kenneth McConnell, University of Maryland 
Elaine McCrate, University of Vermont
Grant McDermott, University of Oregon
Robert McDonald, Northwestern University
Topher McDougal, University of San Diego
Peter McHenry, College of William & Mary
Craig McIntosh, School of Global Policy and Strategy, UCSD
Douglas McKee, Cornell Department of Economics
Rajnish Mehra, Arizona State University
Marc Melitz, Harvard University
Konrad Menzel, NYU
Jennifer Meredith, Colby College
Andrew Metrick, Yale University
Moritz Meyer-ter-Vehn, UCLA
Edward Miguel, University of California, Berkeley
Paul Milgrom, Stanford University
Ronald I. Miller, Columbia University
Keaton Miller, University of Oregon
Nathan Miller, Georgetown University 
Daniel Millimet, Southern Methodist University 
Lawrence Mishel, Economic Policy Institute
Pooya Molavi, Northwestern University
Dilip Mookherjee, Boston University
Jonathan Morduch, New York University
Alan Moreira, University of Rochester
Stephen Morris, M.I.T.
Steven A Morrison, Northeastern University
Fiona Scott Morton, Yale University
Giuseppe Moscarini, Yale University
Christine Moser, Western Michigan University
William Velvel Moskoff, Lake Forest College
Tracy Mott, University of Denver
Peter R. Mueser, University of Missouri
Tyler Muir, UCLA
Joseph Mullins, University of Minnesota
Lalith Munasinghe, Barnard College, Columbia University
David Munro, Middlebury College
Daniel Murphy, University of Virginia
Robert G. Murphy, Boston College
Michael Murray, Bates College
Roger Myerson, University of Chicago
John Nachbar, Washington University in St. Louis
Steven Nafziger, Williams College
Matthew G. Nagler, City University of New York
Paul Natke, Central Michigan University
Rosamond Naylor, Stanford University
Abdoulaye Ndiaye, New York University
Thomas Nechyba, Duke University
Jack Needleman, University of California, Los Angeles
Donald Negri, Willamette University
David Neumark, UC Irvine
Plamen Nikolov, The State University of New York (Binghamton)
Roger G. Noll, Stanford
Peter Norman, University of North Carolina
Lindsey Novak, Colby College
Paul Novosad, Dartmouth College
Nathan Nunn, Harvard University
Anant Nyshadham, University of Michigan
Stephen A. O'Connell, Swarthmore College
Ezra Oberfield, Princeton
Jack Ochs, University of pittsburgh
Gerald Oettinger, University of Texas at Austin
Benjamin Ogden, Texas A&M
Andrew Ojede, Texas State University
Ifeakandu Okoye, Forida A&M University
Alex Olbrecht, Ramapo College
Will Olney, University of Hawaii
Bonnie L. Orcutt, Worcester State Hospital
David L. Ortega, Michigan State University 
Ram Orzach, Oakland University
Ram Orzach, Oakland University 
Abdalla Osman, Department of Applied Economics, University of Minnesota
Sharon Oster, Yale University
Ann Owen, Hamilton College
Orgul Ozturk, University of South Carolina
Warren Bruce Palmer, Beloit College
Susan W. Parker, University of Maryland
Jonathan A. Parker, MIT
Nina Pavcnik, Dartmouth College
David Pearce, New York University
Denis Pelletier, North Carolina State University
Lynne Pepall, Tufts University
Alfredo Marvao Pereira, College of William and Mary
Jeffrey M. Perloff, University of California, Berkeley
Isabelle Perrigne, Rice University
Addison Spencer Perry, ASU
Michael Peters, Yale University
Christina Peters, Metropolitan State University of Denver
Peter A. Petri, Brandeis University
Davide Pettenuzzo, Brandeis University
Paul Pfleiderer, Stanford University
Jakub Lonsky, PhD, University of Liverpool
Elaine L Hill, PhD, University of Rochester 
Joris Pinkse, Penn State
Luigi Pistaferri, Stanford University
Zoe Plakias, Ohio State University
Stephen Polasky, University of Minnesota
Ioana Popovici, Nova Southeastern University
Gyan Pradhan, Christopher Newport University
Sangeeta Pratap, Hunter College and Graduate Center, CUNY
Anne E. Preston, Haverford College
Thomas A. Pugel, New York University
Agnes Quisumbing, International Food Policy Research Institute
Esteban J. Quiñones, Mathematica
Steven Radelet, Georgetown University
Cyrus Ramezani, California Polytechnic State Univ.
Kolleen Rask, College of the Holy cross
Mahdi Rastad, California Polytechnic State University
Debraj Ray, New York University
Steven B Raymar, Fordham University - Gabelli School of Business
John Rehbeck, the Ohio State University
Jennifer Reinganum, Vanderbilt University
Cristina Reiser, University of New Mexico
Philip Reny, University of Chicago
Thomas Rice, UCLA
Lorien Alane Rice, Mills College
Jean-Francois Richard, University of Pittsburgh
Dan Richards, Tufts University
Sam Richardson, Boston College
Mary Rigdon, Rutgers University
Travis Roach, University of Central Oklahoma 
Judith Robinson, Castleton University
Michael Robinson, Mount Holyoke College
Yana Rodgers, Rutgers University
Andres Rodriguez-Clare, UC Berkeley
Antonio Rodriguez-Lopez, University of California, Irvine
Brian Roe, Ohio State University
Giacomo Rondina, UC San Diego
David Ross, Bryn Mawr College
Barkley Rosser, James Madison University
Aimee Drolet Rossi, UCLA 
Maya Rossin-Slater, Stanford University
Gregory Rosston, Stanford University
Alvin Roth, Stanford University 
Alexander D Rothenberg, Syracuse University
Philip Rothman, East Carolina University
Heather Royer, UC Santa Barbara
Christopher J. Ruhm, University of Virginia
Lauren Russell, University of Pennsylvania
Luis Felipe Saenz, University of South Carolina
Henry Saffer, National Bureau of Economic Research
Steven Salop, Georgetown University Law Center
Tobias Salz, MIT
William Sander, DePaul University
Todd Sandler, University of Texas at Dallas 
Sarada Sarada, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Kristina Sargent, Middlebury College
Natasha Sarin, UPenn
José A. Scheinkman, Columbia University
Frank Schilbach, MIT
Richard Schmalensee, MIT
Robert M Schmidt, University of Richmond
Johannes Schmieder, Boston University
Molly Schnell, Northwestern University 
Kevin T. Schnepel, Simon Fraser University
Kim Schoenholtz, NYU Stern School of Business
Andrew Schotter, NYU
Julia Schwenkenberg, Rutgers University, Newark
Norman Sedgley, Loyola University Maryland
Duane J Seppi, Carnegie Mellon University
Ricardo Serrano-Padial, Drexel University
Bradley Shapiro, University of Chicago
Alan Finkelstein Shapiro, Tufts University
Ian Sheldon, Ohio State University
Ashish Shenoy, University of California, Davis
Itai Sher, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Jennifer Shinall, Vanderbilt University 
Jason Shogren, University of Wyoming
Lara Shore-Sheppard, Williams College
Ali Shourideh, Carnegie Mellon University
Richard Sias, University of Arizona
Robin C Sickles, Rice University
Paolo Siconolfi, Business School Columbia University
Yusif Simaan, Fordham University
Christopher Sims, Princeton University
Nirvikar Singh, University of California, Santa Cruz
Sanjay R Singh, UC Davis
Perry Singleton, Syracuse University
Gilbert L. Skillman, Wesleyan University
David Slusky, University of Kansas
Timothy M Smeeding, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Lones Smith, University of Wisconsin - Madison 
Fred Smith, Davidson College
Joel Sobel, University of California, San Diego
Aaron Sojourner, University of Minnesota
Gary Solon, University of Michigan
Barry Sopher, Rutgers University
John A. Sorrentino, Temple University
Roger Sparks, Mills College
Stephen E. Spear, Carnegie Mellon University
David Sraer, UC Berkeley
Richard Stahl, Louisiana State University
Denise L. Stanley, California State University, Fullerton
Miron Stano, Oakland University
Mark Stehr, Drexel University
Richard Steinberg, Dept. of Economics and Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, IUPUI
Joseph Steinberg, University of Toronto (and American citizen!)
Bryce Millett Steinberg, Brown University
John Sterman, MIT
Scott Stern, MIT Sloan
Steven Stern, Stony Brook University
Mary Huff Stevenson, University of Massachusetts Boston
Noah Stoffman, Indiana University
Lars Stole, University of Chicago
John R. Stoll, University of Wisconsin - Green Bay
Daniel F. Stone, Bowdoin College
Adam Storeygard, Tufts University
Joerg Stoye, Cornell University
John K. Stranlund, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Sandip Sukhtankar, University of Virginia
Ashley Swanson, Columbia University
Steve Szeghi, Professor of Economics at Wilmington College, Wilmington, Ohio
Steve Szeghi, Wilmington College, Ohio
Tayfun Sönmez, Boston College
Steven Tadelis, UC Berkeley
Alireza Tahbaz-Salehi, Northwestern University
Elie Tamer, Harvard University
Pankaj Tandon, Boston University
Nori Tarui, University of Hawaii
Joshua Tasoff, Claremont Graduate University
Lowell J Taylor, Carnegie Mellon University
Michael H. Taylor, University of Nevada, Reno
Nathan W. Tefft, Bates College
Mario Teisl, University of Maine
Sebastian Tello-Trillo, University of Virginia
Scott R Templeton, Clemson University
David Terkla, University of Massachusetts Boston
Kevin E Thom, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 
Caroline Thomas, University of Texas, Austin
Frank Thompson, University of Michigan
Nathaniel A. Throckmorton, William & Mary
Tom Tietenberg, Colby College (Emeritus Professor)
Chris Tilly, UCLA
Jeremy Tobacman, University of Delaware
Aron Tobias, Syracuse University
Annette Tomal, Wheaton College
Daniel Tortorice, College of the Holy Cross
Peter Toumanoff, Marquette University
Edward Tower, Duke University
W. Scott Trees, Siena College
Nikos Trichakis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Boone A Turchi, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Lesley Turner, Vanderbilt University
Robert W Turner, Colgate University
Stephen J Turnovsky, University of Washington
Arja Turunen-Red, University of New Orleans
James R Tybout, Pennsylvania State University
Christopher Udry, Northwestern University
Mukti P Upadhyay, Eastern Illinois University
Sanford V.Berg, University of Florida
Paola Valenti, Columbia University
Kerry D. Vandell, University of California - Irvine
Joseph Vavra, University of Chicago
Laura Veldkamp, Columbia University
Gregory Veramendi, University of Munich
Marno Verbeek, Rotterdam School of Management
Eric Verhoogen, Columbia University
Emanuel Vespa, UC San Diego
Lise Vesterlund, University of Pittsburgh 
Tom Vogl, University of California San Diego
Rajiv Vohra, Brown University
Nico Voigtländer, UCLA Anderson School of Management
Annie Voy, Gonzaga University
Susan Vroman, Georgetown University
Quang Vuong, NYU
Paul Wachtel, Stern School of Business, New York University
Sunil Wahal, Arizona State University
Joel Waldfogel, University of Minnesota
Andreas Waldkirch, Colby College
Don E. Waldman, Colgate University
William Waller, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Carl E. Walsh, University of California, Santa Cruz
Xiao Yu Wang, Duke University
Michael Wasylenko, Syracuse Univeristy
George Waters, Illinois State University
Joel Watson, University of California, San Diego
Tara Watson, Williams College
Mark Watson, Princeton University
Richard Van Weelden, University of Pittsburgh
Kenneth Weiher, University of Texas at San Antonio
Jonathan Weinstein, Washington University in St. Louis
Amanda Weinstein, University of Akron
Ivo Welch, UCLA Anderson
Frank Werner, Fordham University
Nils Wernerfelt, Facebook
Birger Wernerfelt, MIT
Maria Westerfield, University of Virginia
Travis Whitacre, SMU
Roger White, Whittier College
Eugene White, Rutgers University
Toni Whited, University of Michigan
John Whitehead, Appalachian State University
Casey Wichman, Georgia Institute of Technology 
Peter J Wilcoxen, Syracuse University
Joshua Wilde, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
Nathan James Williams, Independent 
Robert G. Williams, Guilford College
Anne Williams, Bates College
Bonnie Wilson, Saint Louis University
Alistair Wilson, University of Pittsburgh
Richard Wiltgen, DePaul University 
Donald Wittman, University of California Santa Cruz
Barbara L Wolfe, University of Wisconsin-Madison 
Justin Wolfers, University of Michigan
Catherine Wolfram, University of California, Berkeley
Alexander Wolitzky, MIT
Myrna Wooders, Vanderbilt University
Jonathan Wright, Johns Hopkins University
Brian Davern Wright, UC Berkeley
Bruce Wydick, University of San Francisco
Linus Yamane, Pitzer College
Dean Yang, University of Michigan
Lixin Ye, The Ohio State University
Muhamet Yildiz, MIT
Wesley Yin, University of California, Los Angeles
Gary Yohe, Wesleyan University 
Thomas Youle, Dartmouth College
Stephen L. Zabor, Hiram College
Eduardo Zambrano, California Polytechnic State University
Yongmin Zang, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
Lu Zhang, The Ohio State University
Huizhong Zhou, Western Michigan University
Owen Zidar, Princeton University
Andrea Ziegert, Denison University
Andrew Zimbalist, Smith College
Frederick J. Zimmerman, University of California, Los Angeles
Jonathan Zinman, Dartmouth College
Ben Zweig, New York University
John E. Kwoka, jr., Northeastern University
Ă–mer Ă–zak, Southern Methodist University