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Family Keeps New Maryland Nobel Laureate Grounded

Thomas C. Schelling / CNS-TV Photo
Thomas C. Schelling (left) and his wife, Alice, greet well-wishers at the University of Maryland following the announcement of his Nobel Prize win. (CNS-TV photo)
By Jacqueline Ruttimann
Capital News Service
Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2005

WASHINGTON - For two days, Alice Schelling brought the phone to bed, sure the call would come. Finally, uncertainty crept in and she kept the phone close, but had it in its cradle at the moment.

The call in the early morning hours Monday confirmed her husband, Thomas Schelling, had been tapped for a Nobel laureate in economics. He became the third University of Maryland scholar to be awarded the prestigious honor.

Schelling, 84, a professor emeritus at the University of Maryland with the School of Public Policy and the Department of Economics, was still asleep.

The retired professor had for years been on the Nobel Prize short list for his 1960 book on game theory, "The Strategy of Conflict."  Game theory is the anticipation of what people will do based on current and past relationships or, as Schelling succinctly said, "It's the subject of interdependent decisions."

Thomas C. Schelling / CNS-TV Photo
Schelling's "The Strategy of Conflict" has been translated for readers worldwide.  (CNS-TV photo)

Some predictions, however, such as who might win the Nobel Prize award this year, had eluded him. "His wonderful reasoning for once was incorrect," Alice said.

Game theory is so pervasive now that it has found its way into various arenas of life, including military war strategy, political campaigning and trade negotiations.

One example of how Schelling applied game theory came in 1962, when he served as chairman for the Department of Defense's committee on ballistic missiles.

The nation and the Soviet Union were in the middle of the Cold War and the United States needed to determine whether it would be a good idea to build the missiles. He and the committee members had to run through the consequences of what would happen if both countries built them, if only one built them and if neither built them.

Their decision led to Defense Secretary Robert McNamara persuading the Soviets in 1967 that both countries would be better off without them and the eventual signing of an anti-ballistic missile treaty in 1972.

Schelling shares the $1.3 million prize with Robert Aumann, 75, a retired Hebrew University of Jerusalem professor whom he considers to be "the genuine game theorist."

"I tend to be more a user of game theory," said Schelling. "I consider myself a social scientist strategist on human behavior."

This modesty is what Schelling is known for in the Economics Department.

Video:

The university announces Schelling's award.
(Real Player needed)

"He's a very understated guy," said Department Chairman Peter Morrell. "He didn't develop fundamental mathematic ability, but developed the fundamental insight into this tool. Many ideas are due to him."

Others, such as former University of Maryland economics graduate student Matthew Farrelly, see him as a realist. Schelling was a committee member on his dissertation on government regulation of smoking in 1996. Farrelly recalled how, during his defense, Schelling came up with numerous analogies to explain the results that he obtained.

"He's grounded in reality," said Farrelly. "He pulls you back down to the ground if you've been lost in the theory and in the numbers."

In fact, Schelling does not think that his life will change much from his regular routine.

"I expect more invitations to speak than I would," he said, adding later on that "the money is not going to change our lifestyle."

He said family is the center of his life. He and Alice Schelling, his second wife, between them have six children and nine grandchildren. The couple met 45 years ago when she was his secretary, but they married just 15 years ago.

Schelling, who taught his last classes at the university in the spring, now starts his day by reading the newspaper for one hour at breakfast. Then he and his wife do the Sudoku puzzles that appear in The Washington Post.

"It's a lot of fun with two people to do," he said.

University of Maryland Nobel Prize Winners:

  • Juan Ramon Jimenez, Literature, 1956
  • William Phillips, Physics, 1997
  • Thomas C. Schelling, Economics, 2005
  • He goes to the gym three times a week for a couple of hours. However, the majority of his time is spent with his wife, either taking hikes, listening to music or reading.

    "She's such a terrific companion," he said, adding that the two of them are avid fans of mystery novels.

    Schelling is working on republishing a book of his own with Harvard University Press. It's titled, "Strategies of Commitment and Other Essays."

    Copyright © 2005 University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism


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