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         African Mathematicians:     more books (25)
  1. Benjamin Banneker: Astronomer and Mathematician (African-American Biographies) by Laura Baskes Litwin, Benjamin Banneker, 1999-07
  2. African-Americans in Mathematics 2: 4th Conference for African-American Researchers in the Mathematical Sciencejune 16-19, 1998, Rice University, Houston, Texas (Contemporary Mathematics) by Tex.) Conference for African-American Researchers in the Mathematical Sciences (4th : 1998 : Houston, Nathaniel Dean, et all 1999-12
  3. African Americans in Mathematics: Dimacs Workshop June 26-28, 1996 (Dimacs Series in Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science)
  4. African Mathematicians: Egyptian Mathematicians, Moroccan Mathematicians, Nigerian Mathematicians, South African Mathematicians
  5. MATHEMATICIANS: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, 2nd ed.</i> by Kenneth Manning, Jessica Hornik-Evans, 2006
  6. South African Mathematicians: George Ellis, Lionel Cooper, Chris Brink, Francis Guthrie, Peter Sarnak, Abraham Manie Adelstein, Percy Deift
  7. The Emergence of African-Americans in Mathematics: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by P. Andrew Karam, 2000
  8. Contributions of African American Scientists and Mathematicians by Mozell P. Lang, Thelma Gardner, et all 2005-01
  9. Black Mathematicians and Their Works
  10. Visions: Africans and African Americans in science -math and technology by Marylen E Harmon, 1997
  11. The Negro, Benjamin Banneker, astronomer and mathematician: Plea for universal peace (Records of the Columbia Historical Society) by Philip Lee Phillips, 1917
  12. African and African-American contributions to mathematics by Beatrice Lumpkin, 1985
  13. Mathematician and Administrator, Shirley Mathis McBay (American Women in Science Biography) by Mary Ellen Verheyden-Hilliard, 1985-01
  14. Benjamin Banneker: American Mathematician and Astronomer (Colonial Leaders) by Bonnie Hinman, Arthur Meier Schlesinger, 2000-01

101. NWU, Potchefstroom Campus - File Not Found
South african Mathematical Society. REINECKE, CJ and SWEERS, G. (2003) Solutionswith internal jump for an autonomous elliptic system of FitzHugh-Nagumo
http://www.puk.ac.za/navorsing/navorsingsjaarverslag2003/JV2003_3.HTML
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102. African Journal Of Mathematical Physics (AJMP)
african Journal of Mathematical Physics (AJMP) Mathematical Physics relevantto non commutative geometry, groups, algebras and their representations,
http://gort.ucsd.edu/newjour/a/msg03816.html
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African Journal of Mathematical Physics (AJMP)
African Journal of Mathematical Physics (AJMP) http://www.fsr.ac.ma/GNPHE/ NewJour Home NewJour: A Search ... [Next]

103. Mathematics Archives - Professional Societies
african Mathematical Union The african Mathematical Union (AMU) is the african South african Mathematical Society The South african Mathematical
http://archives.math.utk.edu/societies.html
Professional Societies The following are WWW servers maintained by professional societies and organizations of interest to mathematicians. indicates sites that have a significant amount of materials of interest to mathematics teachers in grades K-12.
African Mathematical Union
The African Mathematical Union (AMU) is the African equivalent of the International Mathematical Union.
American Educational Research Association - Special Interest Group: Research in Mathematics Education
The purpose of SIG/RME is to promote and to disseminate research, development, and evaluative efforts in mathematics education, and to promote and encourage scholarly and productive exchanges among members of all the constituencies that affect, or are affected by, research on the learning and teaching of mathematics.
American Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges (AMATYC)
This service is for the members of the American Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges and other interested professionals to review and receive current information on AMATYC's programs and activities and the activities of our AMATYC Affiliates.
American Mathematical Society
The AMS WWW server provides information to further mathematical research and scholarship. Included on this server is a preprint archives with links to other preprint archives, information on publications published by the AMS, carrer development resources for mathematicians, searchable Combined Membership List, information on meetings and conferences and links to other Mathematics Information Servers.

104. E-Math For Africa
The First Panafrican Mathematical Journal. 67. AMUCHMA Newsletter africanMathematical Union s Comission on the History of Mathematics in Africa.
http://math.golonka.se/links/linkster.php?CID=1

105. NA Digest, V. 99, # 31
is organised by the african Mathematical Union (AMU), the South african MathematicalSociety (SAMS), and the Association for Mathematics Education of South
http://www.netlib.org/netlib/na-digest-html/99/v99n31.html
NA Digest Saturday, July 31, 1999 Volume 99 : Issue 31
Today's Editor:
Cleve Moler
The MathWorks, Inc.
moler@mathworks.com
Submissions for NA Digest:
Mail to na.digest@na-net.ornl.gov.
Information about NA-NET:
Mail to na.help@na-net.ornl.gov. URL for the World Wide Web: http://www.netlib.org/na-net/na_home.html
Date: Fri, 30 Jul 1999 11:37:00 +0100 (BST)
Subject: Wilkinson Prize for Numerical Software
We are pleased to announce that the 1999 Wilkinson Prize for Numerical
Software has been won by Matteo Frigo and Steven Johnson of MIT for
FFTW. The presentation was made by Richard Field, Vice Principal of the
University of Edinburgh and Chairman of NAG, at ICIAM'99 in Edinburgh on
July 8th.
FFTW (the "Fastest Fourier Transform in the West") is a library of C
routines for the computation of the discrete Fourier transform of real
and complex data, that tunes the computation automatically for any

106. PSU Math - Math Societies And Associations
Web servers American Mathematical Society Association of Christians in the France South african Mathematical Society Swedish Mathematical Society
http://www.math.psu.edu/MathLists/Societies.html

107. 6th Conference For African-American Researchers In The Mathematical Sciences (CA
The 6th Conference for africanAmerican Researchers in the Mathematical Scienceswill be held at Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD, June 27-30, 2000.
http://jewel.morgan.edu/~caarms/
Morgan State University will host the 6th Conference for African-American Researchers in the Mathematical Sciences (CAARMS6)
The 6th Conference for African-American Researchers in the Mathematical Sciences will be held at Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD, June 27-30, 2000.
This Conference is sponsored by the National Security Agency (NSA)
Link to the Official CAARMS6 Website. last revised:April 24,2000 Visit Morgan State University. Conference Organizers Institution Phone Number Email Dr. William A. Massey Lucent Technologies will@research.bell-labs.com Dr. Donald King Northeastern University. donking@neu.edu Dr. Leon C. Woodson Morgan State University woodson@jewel.morgan.edu View a group photo from the 1995 conference View a group photo from the 1996 conference View a group photo from the 1997 conference View a group photo from the 1998 conference View a group photo from the 1999 conference View a group photo from the 2000 conference

108. News@nature
The african Institute for Mathematical Sciences will open in Cape Town in October2003, offering master s degrees in mathematics to students from all over
http://www.nature.com/news/2002/020902/full/020902-1.html
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109. SAMS Presidential Address, 1994, 1995
SOUTH african MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY. Presidential Addresses I believe, in thefirst instance, that our Mathematical research topics, as manifested for
http://math.sun.ac.za/~cb/President.html
SOUTH AFRICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY
Presidential Addresses
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS, 1994 Chris Brink, University of Cape Town Colleagues: 1994 has been an astonishing year. We, as a country, came to the edge of the precipice but we did not fall. Instead, we made a historic transition to a new order, which is being hailed around the world as an example to all. We have overcome at last what was seen as the great South African dichotomy: that of black and white. A dichotomy, as you know, is the partitioning of a set into two mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive subsets. It turned out that, in the political sense, we as a nation had been falsely led into a partitioning between black and white, and every one of us will recall the profound sense of relief that came with finally escaping it. What can we learn from this? We can learn, I believe, the danger of false dichotomies. In the affairs of our Society there are many issues which tempt us into a two-way partitioning. Think, for example, about 'pure' versus 'applied' Mathematics; or, at the level of teaching, think of theorem-proving versus problem-solving. Think about basic research versus applied research, and research as opposed to teaching. Think about schools and universities, and teachers and lecturers. Think, on the one hand, about studying a discipline, and on the other hand about training for a job. Many of these distinctions do indeed make sense, and there is no denying their existence. But almost invariably, it seems to me, such distinctions are indicative of the existence of a whole spectrum of activities, and do not establish the discrete and separate existence of the two components of some dichotomy. In consequence, I believe that in the conduct of our professional lives and in the affairs of our Society we will be better served by a continuous model rather than by a discrete model.

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