# AlgDesign 1.2.1 Minor fix in FederovOpt.c to avoid CRAN warning. Minor corrections in AlgDesign.Rnw. # AlgDesign 1.2.0 Many thanks to Kurt Hornik for fixing the C code to meet current standards so that AlgDesign would not be dropped from CRAN! Kurt also fixed up a variety of other minor issues. Thank to Tyler Morgan-Wall for fixing a bug in FederovOpt.R. # AlgDesign 1.1-7.3 Jerome V. Braun volunteered to maintain the AlgDesign package. # AlgDesign 1.1-7.2 ## Robert Eugene Wheeler Obituary November 28, 1931 - June 28, 2012 An avid bicyclist for 50 years was struck by a car on the morning of June 28th. Born and raised in Missouri he served in the Air Force for 10 years stationed in Texas and Alaska. He received a Masters in Mathematics from the University of Chicago. He was employed by the Illinois Institute of Technology and DuPont Company prior to starting ECHIP which specialized in experimental design software. He retired in 2005. His wife and two sons predeceased him. He is survived by his brother Richard Wheeler of Kearny, Missouri, a daughter Cynthia Jenison of Princeton, NJ and three grandchildren. [http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/delawareonline/obituary.aspx?pid=158344424 Retrieved September 29th, 2014] ## Wheeler, Robert Eugene Bob Wheeler As written in his own hand. November 28, 1931 - June 28, 2012 He was born with a caul which gave his grandmothers and other old wives in the family something to talk about for a while. It was purported to show the child was destined for great things, no doubt tracing back to Julius Caesar who was reputed to have been born with one. His life, however, was fairly ordinary, with some ups and downs, but nothing of great note. He was born in his maternal grandparents' home in St. Joseph, Missouri, on the evening of November 28th 1931, in the midst of the great depression. Hospital births in those days were a rarity and indeed were dangerous places as they had been for several centuries, so it was just as well that he followed a long family tradition in this regard. His grandparent's on both sides had been farmers in Northern Missouri, and the story is that his paternal grandfather, Charles, upon hearing of his middle name remarked that "U" was a strange initial for a child to bear. He possessed many memories from his first year, long before his brother (Richard) was born, and recalled his homesickness when he stayed at his grand¬parent's farm during his mother's confinement. He started school at five, and clearly remembered the fun he had taking the entrance test which consisted of placing brightly colored cubes in slots. He often felt that this early start was a disadvantage because he was always younger than his classmates. He walked to school, some eight tenths of a mile, since busing was unknown in those days, and remembered the trips with joy, especially since he often walked part way with a girlfriend, Dixe - they held hands. The war came, and his father, Jack, became a machinist and took a job at the Pratt and Whitney plant in Independence, MO. There they lived across the street from the two room school where he took classes. After the war they moved to Kansas City where he went to high school at East High. He was a poor scholar, considerably bored with the classroom experience. He would usually read the text during the first week or so of school, and then fail to complete the homework assignments. He kept busy however with part time jobs - theater usher, grocery clerk, pin setter in a bowling alley, and in his last year in high school, as a lab assistant at Midwest Research Institute. He also built things. He carved bows, made arrows, joined an archery club, ground a mirror for a four inch reflelecting telescope, and spent time at the library trying to learn Egyptian Hieroglyphics, which last impressed a few business men so much that they sponsored his attendance at Boy's State; which was mostly a young politician training ground, and for which he had no taste. When he turned seventeen, he quit school in 1948, before graduation, because he could and because his grades were very poor. He spent nine years in the Army Air Corps, which later became the Air Force, first, at Lackland AFB near San Antonio Texas and later at Elmendorf AFB near Anchorage Alaska. In neither case did he do traditional military things. The psychologists who constructed aptitude tests, recruited him because of his scores on the tests, and they had persuaded the Air Force to supply military personnel to assist them. For the next six years spent his time among the psychologists at the Human Resources Research Center, which gave him a bent for statistics, and encouraged him to write a couple of papers. During this time he married and they had a daughter (Cynthia). As is the case with the military, he was transferred out of this snug nest into the cold of Alaska, where he was a duck out of water. He was met upon arrival by an impressive senior sergeant who was expecting a skilled office manager because of the military specialty number that had been assigned to him - there was consternation on both sides. Fortunately the sergeant knew of a couple of odd ball civilians in the command building who were looking for some help with their Operations Research activity; and so it happened that he spent the next three years doing the sort of mathematics that had been popularized during the war as an aid to command decisions. As a result of this experience he developed certain skills and contacts which led him to enroll at the University of Chicago and to work for one of these contacts, the Institute of Air Weapons Research, part of the applied research arm of the University. Since he had no academic record, he took a series of tests and was admitted to the master's program in the Statistics Department, where he took his degree in 1960. (He was required to take a course in humanities before moving on to the master's program, since admissions though he was a bit weak in that area.) After obtaining his degree, he worked for a time as a statistician at the Illinois Institute of Technology, and then struck out on his own as a consulting statistician; which wasn't much to his liking since it involved becoming a salesman for his services - he likened it to a funnel with the need to find new clients to pour into the funnel to make up for those lost. In any case he joined the statistics group of DuPont in 1962, and stayed with them until 1981, when he left to form his own company (ECHIP). One of the reasons that he left was because he was unable to persuade DuPont management to support the coming revolution in personal computers - later on they turned out to be one of his customers. He had just turned 50 and was eligible for early retirement which provided health insurance for his family, which had expanded to three children with the birth of Ralph and George in Chicago. The principal product of ECHIP was experimental design software for personal computers, which was quite a new thing in those days. ECHIP was the first software to employ algorithmic experimental deign. It had a modest success, and at one time had an income of a million dollars a year. He grew bored with it and retired at 65, turning the management over to others. Competition and other things caused revenues to decline until in 2005, at an annual meeting, he discovered that company had accrued considerable unsecured debt. He closed the company in 2006 after paying off all creditors. During his time with DuPont, he published a number of papers; they are honest contributions to the literature, original and interesting, but of no great moment. He was involved with computers from the beginning: from punched card tabulators in the Air Force to the earliest machine language computers at Chicago. He became a useful programmer using several languages from the first Fortran and Unicode implementations to more sophisticated languages as the field grew. He programmed the ECHIP software in C, mostly to avoid any suspicion that he was copying Fortran code he had developed while at DuPont. Later he contributed several widely used packages to the R archive: algorithmic design, permutation tests and relative risk. He wrote a number of programs for bicyclists; the first ones were written for individual computers, but later they were mostly web based involving many computer languages. He had many other interests, among which were fishing, guns, photography and bicycling. More often than not, he obtained his greatest pleasure from the technical aspects of his hobbies. He made rods from bamboo, tied flies, loaded his own ammunition and ran experiments on shooting precision and accuracy, developed and printed his photos, wrote a technical paper on large format photography, and built bicycles. He was a founding member of the White Clay Bicycle Club, and rode his bicycles until the end, although he did slow down in later years. He was interested in everything and was able to converse on many topics, adapting himself as needed to the occasion. He was ignorant about sports and never had a taste for religion. Interestingly, he decided at the age of seven that religion was foolishness. At a later age, he concluded that life on Earth was nothing but the natural combination of positive and negative elements; that the apparent complexity was no more than what should be expected given enough time, and that the human mind is nothing but an example of this complexity with its "logic" an elaborate collection of rules of thumb - this is hardly a unique view, even though many fancy otherwise. His wife and two sons predeceased him. His daughter carried forward some of his genes into the next generation, which is the purpose of it all. (07/02/12) [http://www.delmarvaobits.com/posts.cfm?obit=35076 Retrieved September 29th, 2014]