As far as I know, the memorial will be in late April. An obituary is below. June Zaccone, National Jobs for All Coalition (and Economics (Emerita), Hofstra University) [EMAIL PROTECTED] Michael Perelman wrote: > > A memorial service for Lynn Turgeon will be held sometime this week at > Hofstra University. Lynn Turgeon died on Wednesday, March 10th in Ann Arbor, Michigan, after a long illness. He was 78 years old. He joined the Hofstra faculty in 1957 was a Visiting Fulbright Professor of Economics at Moscow State University in 1975 and also at the Academy for Foreign Trade in Moscow in 1991. During the 1966-67 academic year he was awarded the University's Distinguished Teaching Award, bestowed upon him by Hofstra's student body. Professor Turgeon was a specialist in comparative systems, the Russian economy and Keynesian economics. A prolific writer and correspondent on the Internet, his full length books included "The Contrasting Economies", "The Advanced Capitalist System", "State and Discrimination", and "Bastard Keynesianism". He was an unabashed Keynesian and frequently contributed to the Canadian journal, "Economic Reform", which remains a bastion of Keynesian thinking. Ironically, his favorite mentor at Columbia University, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1959, was Robert Fellner, an avowed neo-classicist. Professor Turgeon taught at Hofstra University for 33 years, and reminded his students that often the most important learning occurs when you confront ideas diametrically opposed to your own. Dr. Turgeon's views on Economics were iconoclastic-- often at odds with both conventional economists and colleagues who shared his perspective. He believed the American economy was perpetually prone to under- consumption and therefore advocated continuous "active" federal deficits to spur demand rather than allow "passive" deficits to result from under-use of capacity. An early and vocal opponent of the Vietnam War, he nevertheless argued that large military expenditures were perversely "functional" for an economy that was unable to provide true full employment. He also advocated a neutral monetary policy harkening back to the 1940s when the Federal Reserve was subordinate to the Treasury and interest rates were kept low. Dr. Turgeon believed that inflation in the past 50 years was largely of the cost-push variety and thus monetarist solutions leading to tight money were inappropriate and fundamentally destructive. Professor Turgeon loved to challenge Milton Friedman's maxim of "no free lunch". He argued that because our economy is normally well below true full employment, not only "free lunches", but schools, bridges and many other productive goods can be provided at virtually no opportunity cost to society. Dr. Turgeon was well known outside the United States and might properly be called a citizen of the world. He traveled and lectured extensively in Russia and Eastern Europe during the height of the Cold War and established many contacts with Eastern European scholars whom he hosted here in the United States. Dr. Turgeon is survived by his daughter, D. Kim Turgeon M.D., two grandchildren, Livia Turgeon, a sister Margaret Johnston, as well as legions of grateful students and friends. Martin Melkonian, Department of Economics, Hofstra University, tel: 212-864-4493 516-463-5595 (O) 516-538-0299(H) fax 516-463-6519 [EMAIL PROTECTED]