An earlier post provided the syllabi for the Harvard economics department public finance course (actually consolidated into a single document for the undergraduate and graduate versions of the course) taught by J. Keith Butters and Arnold M. Soloway in 1954-55.
Since both instructors received their doctorates in economics from Harvard, I have added this post that provides some biographical information about Arnold M. Soloway. The previous post did the same for J. Keith Butters.
Before getting his economics training at Harvard, Soloway was a Phi Beta Kappa, two-way tackle at Brown University. He was such a good athlete that he was included in the Sports Illustrated 25th Anniversary All-American Team (see below).
I begin with the vital dates: Arnold M. Soloway was born December 3, 1920 in New York City and he died April 13, 2016 in Westwood, Massachusetts.
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Harvard Ph.D. (1952)
Arnold Michael Soloway, A.B. (Brown Univ.) 1942, A.M. (ibid.) 1948. Special Field, Public Finance. Thesis, “The Purchase Tax and British Economic Policy, 1940-1950.”
Source: Harvard University. Report of the President of Harvard College, 1951-52, p. 178.
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Arnold M. Soloway
Obituary
Arnold M. Soloway, former Harvard economics professor, real estate developer, state chairman of Americans for Democratic Action, prominent 1960s Democratic Party leader, and well known expert on Israel and the Middle East, died at his home in Westwood, MA on Wednesday, April 13, 2016. He was 95.
Arnie graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Brown University in 1942, where he also starred on the football team. Following WWII, he returned to Brown as an economics instructor and assistant football coach, where he coached a young quarterback from Brooklyn, NY named Joe Paterno. He left Brown in 1948 and came to Harvard where he taught for more than 10 years and received his PhD in economics. During this same period, in 1948, Arnie also founded Camp Walt Whitman, a co-ed summer camp in New Hampshire, which he ran with his brother for more than twenty years and which today remains one of the nation’s highest rated summer camps. After leaving Harvard, he was an economics and business consultant for more than a decade.
He helped lead then-Boston Mayor John Collins’s “New Boston Committee” and its seminal study on Boston’s housing challenges, and later went on to serve on the consumer advisory council established by then-Attorney General Edward J. McCormack. In the years that followed he became increasingly active in Massachusetts and national democratic politics, including managing McCormack’s Senate campaign against Edward M. Kennedy in 1961 and his later gubernatorial campaign against John Volpe in 1966; chairing the Massachusetts chapter of Americans for Democratic Action; managing the Massachusetts campaign for Hubert Humphrey in his 1968 presidential campaign, and serving as a senior advisor to the late Senator Henry M. “Scoop” Jackson in 1976.
In the early 1960s, Arnie led the renovation of the old Bellevue Hotel next to the state Capitol into an apartment complex and built the landmark “Jamaicaway Towers,” across from Jamaica Pond, at the time the tallest high rise apartment complex in New England. He later founded Design Housing, Inc., through which he built a number of residential developments including the Townhouses at Lars Andersen in Brookline, Allandale Farms in Boston, and Lochstead in Falmouth.
In addition, Arnie was the first Chairman of the Facing History and Ourselves Foundation, which was created when the now-internationally acclaimed holocaust-based curriculum began to spread beyond its roots in the Brookline schools. He also chaired and was an early backer of the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting (CAMERA) and founded the Center for Near East Policy Research, through which he published numerous monographs and papers on Middle East issues.
He received the Louis Brandeis Award from the Zionist Organization of America in 1996 and was inducted into the Brown University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1993. In 1968, Sports Illustrated named him to their 25th Anniversary All American Football team.
Arnie is survived by three children: Nathaniel (Nick) of Helena, MT; Stan of Washington, DC; and Belle of Westwood, MA; a daughter-in-law Kathy, also of Washington, DC; and seven grandchildren: Aaron of San Francisco; Mollie of Orford, NH; Anna and Sonya of Washington, DC; and Daniel Robinson of San Francisco, Eugene Robinson of East Lansing, MI, and Hannah Robinson of Westwood, MA. He was pre-deceased in 2004 by his wife of 56 years, Joan Field Soloway.
Services at the Levine Chapels, 470 Harvard St., Brookline on Friday, April 15 at 1:00pm.
Burial in Sharon Memorial Park, 40 Dedham St., Sharon.
Source: Dignity Memorial webpage obituary.
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Brown University Athletics Hall of Fame
Arnold M. Soloway ‘42, Football
Hometown: Brookline, MA
Sport: Football
Year Inducted: 1993
Arnie Soloway was a very effective two-way tackle for three years – ’39, ’40 & ’41 – three very good Brown football teams. As a junior and again as a senior he was selected to the All-New England Team; the only Brown lineman to be awarded that honor in those years. As a senior Arnie was also awarded the Class of 1910 Football Trophy at the team banquet. The NFL Brooklyn Dodgers gave Arnie a contract to play following graduation, but with the onset of World War II Arnie volunteered to enter the service. In 1946 Arnie was hired by Rip Engle to join the Brown coaching staff with Ernie Savignano; and from 1946-48 they groomed Brown athletes to go on to varsity competition. While coaching afternoons Arnie earned his Masters Degree in economics in 1948. During 1949 and 1950 he continued to scout for Brown while studying and teaching at Harvard, completing his Ph.D. in economics in 1952, where he remained on the faculty until 1960. In 1967 Arnie was once again recognized for his football accomplishments at Brown when he was selected to the Sports Illustrated 25th Anniversary All-American Team. Arnie has had a varied and effective career in the public and private sectors: Chairman, Harvard Graduate Society Council, 1982-83; Massachusetts Board of Higher Education, 1980-81; Chairman, Special Commission on Boston Public Housing, 1978-79; Director, National Committee on American Foreign Policy; National Bureau of Economic Research, 1974-79; Visiting Professor, Graduate School, Boston College. Arnie and his wife, Joan Field Soloway (Pembroke, ’49) reside in Brookline and have three children: Nathaniel A. Brown ’74; Stan Z., Dennison ’75; and Belle F., Brown ’78; and, as Arnie will tell you, seven fantastic grandchildren from 7 months to 11 years old.
Source: Brown University Athletics Hall of Fame.
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Resigns chairmanship of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Alumni Association
Arnold M. Soloway, chairman of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Alumni Association quit his post in June to protest the appointment of a Palestinian scholar to a research position at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Soloway charged that Whalid Khalidi’s appointment in the spring of 1982 was dictated by a Saudi businessman’s $1 million gift. Harvard officials declined comment.
Source: The Harvard Crimson, September 12, 1983.
Image Source: Dignity Memorial webpage obituary.