Friday, June 05, 2015

Jimmye Hillman

On Jun 4, 2015, at 4:44 PM, Ke Chiang Hsieh  wrote:
Dear friends,

Our beloved Jimmye passed away early this morning with his family around him. Helen and her children take the advantage of their being assemble here to have Jimmye’s requiem at 11 AM on Monday, 8 June, at his and our home parish.  I encourage you to spread the word and be present at the appointed hour.  Thank you!

I would also remind you that at 8:30 AM on Saturday, 6 June, we will have the requiem for beloved Jack Fey (http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/tucson/obituary.aspx?pid=174878810 ), a long-time parishioner.  Please also honor him with your presence.

Peace,

Your Senile Warden,

John

Here is Jimmye's obituary:




Jimmye Hillman
Jimmye S. Hillman, a much-loved member of the St. Michael’s parish, long-time professor at the U of A, one of the most influential international economists of his generation, and late in life a literary memoirist, passed away of complications from a stroke June 4, 2015. 
Hillman was born in 1923 and grew up on a subsistence farm in Greene County, Mississippi. His parents were schoolteachers who homed to the family farm in the depths of the depression and sent their precocious son off to the university at the age of sixteen. After graduating from Mississippi State University in 1942, Hillman served in the United States Army in 1942-45, after which he obtained his Masters Degree from Texas A & M University, and received his doctorate in agricultural economics from University of California, Berkeley, where he was a Rockefeller Scholar from 1948-50. 
Hillman arrived at the U of A in 1950, became department chair in 1961, and served in that role until his retirement in 1990. He trained generations of agricultural economists and made the U of A an important center for study in the field. His special themes were the convergence of the green revolution and the globalization of trade. In two books, technical and prescient, Nontariff Agricultural Trade Barriers (1978) and Technical Barriers to Agricultural Trade (1991) and in numerous articles, he examined the globalization of food production and consumption, the proliferation of new food technologies (anticipating the emergence of GMO’s), and the ways agribusiness and technology were outstripping the capacity of institutions, locally and globally, to develop a consensus on standards to protect the environment and human health and promote social justice. 
In his role as an activist economist, he served as economist for the U. S. Agency for International Development in Brazil from 1957-59, developed USAID Green Revolution projects in the Cape Verde Islands, and served as an advisor on agricultural policy to the government of Portugal when that country was preparing to enter the European Union. In 1966-67, he was Executive Director of the President’s National Advisory Commission on Food and Fiber, appointed by President Lyndon Johnson, and in 1983-84, chaired the agricultural study group assisting the President’s Commission on United States-Japanese Relations, under President Ronald Reagan. 
Hillman served a President of the American Agricultural Economics Association in 1970-71 having been President of the Western Farm Economics Association, 1966-67. He was a member of the Western States Manpower Advisory Committee established by the U. S. Commission on Civil Rights. 
In 1972-73, Professor Hillman was a Visiting Research Fellow at Jesus College, University of Oxford and was a visiting distinguished professor of economics at Lincoln University in Christchurch, New Zealand in 1995-96 and received an honorary doctorate from the University of Ceará, Brazil in 1999. 
In his retirement, Hillman turned to creative non-fiction and the memoir. His account of his childhood, good times and hard times in the Depression years, when his family bartered with the town store for groceries by raising semi-feral hogs in the pine woods of rural Mississippi, is called Hogs, Mules and Yellow Dogs. It was published by University of Arizona Press in 2012. One reviewer described it as “destined to become a classic of the local literature of Mississippi, alongside Eudora Welty and William Faulkner.”
Hillman established a graduate fellowship program for foreign students in the department of Agricultural Economics at the University, established in his wife’s name a collection and research fellowships in the Texas Collection at Baylor University, and was an member of the board and benefactor of the University of Arizona Poetry Center. He also established the Agnes Butler Endowment at Saint Mary’s College in California. 
He is survived by his wife Helen, children Brent, Brenda and Bradley Hillman and their partners Susan McNabb, Robert Hass and Valerie Werstler. The couple have three grandchildren, Elizabeth Camber, Thomas Hillman, and Louisa Michaels as well as two great-grandchildren Leon Legere and Simon Camber.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made in his name either the to Saint Michaels and All Angels Church or to University of Arizona Poetry Center.