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         American Mathematicians:     more books (100)
  1. Pioneering Women in American Mathematics (History of Mathematics) by Judy Green and Jeanne LaDuke, 2008-12-16
  2. Jacques Hadamard: A Universal Mathematician (History of Mathematics, V. 14) by V. G. Mazia, T. O. Shaposhnikova, 1998-01
  3. Benjamin Banneker: American Scientific Pioneer (Signature Lives: Revolutionary War Era series) by Weatherly, Myra, 2006-06-01
  4. Science, 28 November 1958, Articles on Genetic and Somatic Effects of Carbon-14, Soviet Psychology and Psychophysiology, C. F. Roos, Econometrician and Mathematician, Nobel Prizes, and Much More! by American Association for the Advancement of Science., 1958-01-01
  5. Stephen Smale: The Mathematician Who Broke the Dimension Barrier by Steve Batterson, 2000-02
  6. Bourbaki: A Secret Society of Mathematicians by Maurice Mashaal, 2006-06-01
  7. Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Volume 2 by American Mathematical Society, 1952
  8. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society Volume 72, No. 1, Part II Norbert Wiener 1894-1964 by Felix; Spanier, E.H.; Gerstenhaber, Murray; Editors Browder, 1966-01-01
  9. Third International Congress of Chinese Mathematicians (Ams/Ip Studies in Advanced Mathematics) by Ka-Sing Lau, and Shing-Tung Yau, 2008-04-04
  10. Career opportunities for mathematicians. (Annual Jobs Issue)(Career Reports/Mathematics and Science): An article from: The Black Collegian by Valerie L. Thomas, 1993-03-01
  11. Mathematical Sciences Professional Directory, 2005
  12. Elbert Frank Cox: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i>
  13. The Work and Impact of Benjamin Banneker: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Elizabeth D. Schafer, 2000
  14. Banneker, Benjamin: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Mathematics</i> by Jacqueline Leonard, 2002

41. The Faces Of Science African Americans In The Sciences
Biographies of African Americans working in the science fields, ranging from geologists and astronomers to mathematicians and inventors.
http://www.princeton.edu/~mcbrown/display/faces.html

42. American Mathematical Society: Mathematics Research And Scholarship
Founded to promote mathematical research and education through conferences,contests surveys, publications, employment services, scholarship programs,
http://www.ams.org/
AMS Bookstore CML Journals MathSciNet ... Search
Areas of Interest Membership
Customer Services

AMS Governance

Government Relations
...
Search the AMS website

News Help for Mathematicians Displaced by Katrina Serge Lang, 1927-2005 ICM 2006 Travel Grants AMS Releases MR Citation Database ... more Calendar This Mathematical Month The Einstein Public Lecture in Mathematics "In celebration of the 100th anniversary of Albert Einstein's annus mirabilis" (Sponsored by the American Mathematical Society) to be given by Sir Michael Atiyah on Friday, October 21, 2005 Recent Additions AMS Employment Opportunities American Mathematical Society
201 Charles Street
Providence, RI 02904-2294 USA
Telephone: 800 321-4AMS (4267) or 401 455-4000,
Fax Number: 401 331-3842 Electronic Mail: ams@ams.org Privacy Statement

43. Mathematical Sciences Career Information
Have you ever wondered what a mathematician working in industry or the government The american Mathematical Society, the Mathematical Association of
http://www.ams.org/careers/
Have you ever wondered what a mathematician working in industry or the government does all day? You can look in the Archives at an alphabetical listing of over 90 career profiles of mathematicians working in nonacademic positions. Or, you can Search the Archives by key word, employment sector or degree and access the profiles, forums and applications of the mathematicians previously profiled in the Mathematical Careers Bulletin Board.
Have you ever been mystified by what applications there might be for that topic in mathematics that you spent so much time struggling with? The Mathematical Applications Index includes lists of applications provided by the mathematicians profiled on the bulletin board and is a quick reference to some of the fields of mathematics used in industry and government applications.
A summary of data from a National Survey of Recent College Graduates sponsored by the NSF provides a look at demographic, educational and employment characteristics of recent bachelor's and master's degree recipients working in nonacademic positions. Do you need some help writing a resume or starting a job search?

44. Mathematical Association Of America: MAA Online
american Mathematical Monthly Mathematics Magazine College Mathematics Journal Math Horizons FOCUS JOMA Quantitative Literacy Author s
http://www.maa.org/
@import url(/style/hpage.css);

45. Mathematicians Born In USA
Main index Biographies Index History Topics Index Famous curves index mathematicians of the day Timelines Search Form Societies, honours, etc.
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/BirthplaceMaps/Countries/USA.html
Mathematicians born in USA
Click on the name below to go to the biography. Aiken
A Adrain Albert

Alexander

Archie Alexander
...
Woodward

Click HERE to see a clickable map of USA and Canada.
Places Index
Birthplace Maps Index Countries Index
Main index
... Societies, honours, etc.
JOC/EFR/BS January 1998 The URL of this page is:
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/BirthplaceMaps/USA.html

46. American Mathematical Society
The american Mathematical Society started its existence as the New York The history of that Society, prior to becoming the american Mathematical Society
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Societies/AMS.html
The American Mathematical Society
The American Mathematical Society started its existence as the New York Mathematical Society which was founded in 1888. The history of that Society, prior to becoming the American Mathematical Society, is related in the article on the New York Mathematical Society A major motivation for the New York Mathematical Society to become a national mathematical society came about through the International Mathematical Congress held in Chicago in August 1893 in conjunction with the World's Columbian Exposition. The main international speaker was Klein who delivered the Evanston Colloquium lectures over a period of six days. After this Klein toured the United States and visited the New York Mathematical Society where J E McClintock , the President of the Society, introduced him as an:- ... apostle, prophet, evangelist, and teacher of mathematics - excelling in each office ... Klein lectured to the New York Mathematical Society and engaged in an open discussion session. Now Eliakim Moore was the chairman of the organising committee for the International Mathematical Congress which had been held in Chicago and the committee had received 39 papers for publication in a Conference Proceedings. After unsuccessfully attempting to find financial backing for the publication, he approached the New York Mathematical Society and, by June 1894, they had guaranteed up to $1000 to have Macmillan and Co publish the Proceedings. Archibald writes [2]:-

47. Electronic Sources For Mathematics
The american Mathematical Society AMS Home Page, probably the best starting pointfor finding mathematical resources. EMS European Mathematical Information
http://www.math.upenn.edu/MathSources.html
Mathematics Sources
Quick Reference:
Sources of Mathematics Information Look Here First Preprint Archives Database Gateways (a mixed bag)

48. Charles L. Reason, An African American Mathematician In 1850
Charles Reason, African american mathematician in 1850 (below). Kelly Miller,first Black graduate student A Contemporary History of Blacks in Mathematics
http://www.math.buffalo.edu/mad/special/reason_charles_l.html
BENJAMIN BANNEKER Thomas Fuller, African slave and savant? An African mathematician in the early 1700's Charles Reason, African American mathematician in 1850 (below) Kelly Miller, first Black graduate student A Contemporary History of Blacks in Mathematics return to SPECIAL ARTICLES Charles L. Reason African American Mathematician 1818 - 1893
Charles L. Reason was born July 21, 1818 in New York City to West Indies immigrants Michiel and Elizabeth Reason. Charles attended the African Free School along with his brothers Elmer and Patrick (both who are important historical figures in their own right). An excellent student in mathematics, Reason became an instructor in 1832 at the school at age fourteen (this became a striking matter for the news), receiving a salary of $25 a year. He used some of his earnings to hire tutors to improve his knowledge. Later, he decided to enter the ministry but was rejected because of his race by the General Theological Seminary of the Protestant Episcopal church in New York City. Reason rejected such "sham Christianity" and resigned in protest from St. Philip's Church, the congregation sponsoring his application. Undaunted by Episcopal racism, he studied next at McGrawville College in McGraw, New York. Reason aided in drafting a call to the first New York State Convention of Negroes in 1840 and advocated in New York City a manual-labor school to provide training in the inductrial arts. He created a normal (teaching) school as a remedy to the charge that black teachers were inefficient and incompetent. He decided to pursue a career in teaching, believing strongly that education was the best means for black advancement. In British abolitionist Julia Griffiths's

49. American Mathematical Monthly
american Mathematical Monthly american Mathematical Monthly readers expecta high standard of exposition; they expect articles to inform, stimulate,
http://gort.ucsd.edu/newjour/a/msg02973.html
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American Mathematical Monthly
http://www.jstor.org/journals/00029890.html http://www.maa.org/pubs/monthly.html ). Editor: Roger A. Horn Email: monthly@math.utah.edu NewJour Home NewJour: A Search
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50. American Mathematical Society; Transactions Of The AMS
american Mathematical Society; Transactions of the AMS For more information,contact american Mathematical Society, Membership and Customer Services
http://gort.ucsd.edu/newjour/a/msg01758.html
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American Mathematical Society; Transactions of the AMS
Subject: Transactions of the American Math Society Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2000 American Mathematical Society; Transactions of the AMS http://www.ams.org/tran/ ISSN 1088-6850 Journal overview: This journal is devoted to research articles in all areas of pure and applied mathematics. To be published in the Transactions, a paper must be correct, new, and significant. Further, it must be well written and of interest to a substantial number of mathematicians. Piecemeal results, such as an inconclusive step toward an unproved major theorem or a minor variation on a known result, are in general not acceptable for publication. Papers of less than 10 printed pages that meet the above criteria should be submitted to the Proceedings of the AMS. Published pages are the same size as those generated in the style files provided for AMS-LaTeX or AMS-TeX. 30-day free trial for electronic subscribers! For more information, contact American Mathematical Society, Membership and Customer Services Department at 1-800-321-4267 or (401) 455-4000 worldwide e-mail: cust-serv@ams.org. Contact: William Beckner Email: beckner@math.utexas.edu NewJour Home NewJour: A Search
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51. American Mathematical Society - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
The american Mathematical Society (AMS) is dedicated to the interests of mathematicalresearch and education, which it does with various publications and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Mathematical_Society
American Mathematical Society
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The American Mathematical Society (AMS) is dedicated to the interests of mathematical research and education, which it does with various publications and conferences as well as annual monetary awards to mathematicians. It was founded in , the brainchild of Thomas Fiske who was impressed by the London Mathematical Society on a visit to England. The AMS is an advocate of the typesetting programme TeX , insisting that contributions be written in it and producing its own version, AMS-TeX. edit
Publications
The AMS publishes Mathematical Reviews , a database of reviews of mathematical publications. The AMS also publishes multiple journals:

52. Codes Of Ethics Online: American Mathematical Society
american Mathematical Society. Date on which the source of the code was verifiedby the Center ETHICAL GUIDELINES OF THE american MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY
http://www.iit.edu/departments/csep/codes/coe/American Mathematical Society.html
Organization: American Mathematical Society Source: CSEP Library Previous Version(s) in our Codes of Ethics Online collection: None ETHICAL GUIDELINES OF THE AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY Editor's Note This article is being reprinted to include information that was inadvertently omitted when the article first appeared in April 1994 Notices. Details on how to submit comments and suggestions regarding the proposed guidelines now appear in paragraph two of the article below.
The Council of the AMS is seeking comments on a set of ethical guidelines drafted by the ad hoc Committee on Professional Responsibility. The proposed guidelines and some introductory material are presented here.
All members of the mathematical community are encouraged to examine carefully these proposed guidelines. Comments and suggestions should be addressed in writing to: Chair, ad hoc Committee on Professional Ethics. c/o Prof. Robert Fossum, secretary, American Mathematical Society. Department of Mathematics. University of Illinois. 1409 W. Green St.. Urbana, IL 61801-2975. The Committee will examine all comments received bv the secretary before September 30, 1994. Proposed final wording revised in light of these comments, will be submitted to the Council in January, 1995.

53. Events - UNL - Department Of Mathematics
american Mathematical SocietyFall 2005 Central Section Meeting The americanMathematical Society is pleased to inaugurate a series of public lectures
http://www.math.unl.edu/pi/events/ams2005
Schedule
The meeting will start at noon October 21 and run until 1pm, October 23, 2005. Registration will open approximately at noon. Most special sessions will start at 1:45pm on Friday; the Special Session on Randomness in Computation will start Friday morning and finish Saturday morning.
Public Lecture
The American Mathematical Society is pleased to inaugurate a series of public lectures to be given annually at one of its eight sectional meetings. The Department of Mathematics at UNL is honored that the AMS has chosen the Lincoln meeting for its first public lecture and that Abel-prizewinner Sir Michael Atiyah will be the speaker. Sir Michael Atiyah will speak on "The Nature of Space", Friday, October 21 in Kimball Recital Hall at 4:00pm. There will be a reception immediately following the lecture in the Van Brunt Visitors Center.
Abstract: The Nature of Space
For more than two thousand years philosophers, mathematicians and physicists have struggled to understand the nature of space. Kant studied the role of the human mind, mathematicians examined the logical ramifications of space and physicists investigated experimental phenomena. The story continues to the present day , with increasingly exotic scenarios of vibrating strings in ten dimensional space-time. I shall review the history and present status of the great philosophical controversies in the light of modern developments. Please note: Sir Michael's lecture is free and open to the public.

54. American Mathematical Monthly, The: Rockefeller And The Internationalization Of
Full text of the article, Rockefeller and the Internationalization of MathematicsBetween the Two World Wars Documents and Studies for the Social History
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3742/is_200301/ai_n9218492
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles American Mathematical Monthly, The Jan 2003
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Rockefeller and the Internationalization of Mathematics Between the Two World Wars: Documents and Studies for the Social History of Mathematics in the 20th Century American Mathematical Monthly, The Jan 2003 by Fenster, Della D
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Rockefeller and the Internationalization of Mathematics Between the Two World Wars: Documents and Studies for the Social History of Mathematics in the 20th Century. By Reinhard Siegmund-Schultze. Birkhauser, Basel, 2001, xiii + 341 pp., ISBN 4-7643-6468-8, $94.95. Continue article Advertisement
Viewing Veblen as a potential asset, Rose replied to Flexner, "I wonder if Veblen would be a good man to give me a list of mathematicians in this country and abroad, that is a short list of the really eminent men in this field-men combining mathematical achievement with those human qualities which would inspire the younger worker" (p. 36). Indeed, Rose met with Veblen and with G. D. Birkhoff at Harvard before he left for Europe. Rose reported that he and Birkhoff discussed "at length the relation of mathematics to physics and chemistry." But Rose also chose to record Birkhoff's insight on the "human qualities" of the mathematicians in Paris and Germany. As Rose indicated based on his conversation with Birkhoff

55. American Mathematical Monthly, The: E. H. Moore's Early Twentieth-Century Progra
Full text of the article, EH Moore s early TwentiethCentury program for reformin mathematics education from american Mathematical Monthly, The,
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3742/is_200110/ai_n8975459
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles American Mathematical Monthly, The Oct 2001
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports E. H. Moore's early Twentieth-Century program for reform in mathematics education American Mathematical Monthly, The Oct 2001 by Roberts, David Lindsay
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. 1. INTRODUCTION. The purpose of this article is to examine briefly the nature and consequences of an early twentieth-century program to reorient the American mathematical curriculum, led by mathematician Eliakim Hastings Moore (1862-1932) of the University of Chicago. Moore's efforts, I conclude, were not ultimately very successful, and the reasons for this failure are worth pondering. Like William Mueller's recent article [16], which draws attention to the spirited debates regarding American mathematics education at the end of the nineteenth century, the present article may remind some readers of more recent educational controversies. I don't discourage such thinking, but caution that the lessons of history are not likely to be simple ones.

56. American Mathematical Society -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
american Mathematical Society. Categories Mathematical societies The americanMathematical Society (AMS) is dedicated to the interests of (Click link for
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/A/Am/American_Mathematical_Society
American Mathematical Society
[Categories: Mathematical societies]
The American Mathematical Society (AMS) is dedicated to the interests of (Click link for more info and facts about mathematical) mathematical research and education, which it does with various publications and conferences as well as annual monetary awards to mathematicians. It was founded in 1888, the brainchild of Thomas Fiske who was impressed by the (Click link for more info and facts about London Mathematical Society) London Mathematical Society on a visit to England.
The AMS is an advocate of the typesetting programme (Click link for more info and facts about TeX) TeX , insisting that contributions be written in it and producing its own version, AMS-TeX.
Publications
The AMS publishes (Click link for more info and facts about Mathematical Reviews) Mathematical Reviews , a database of reviews of mathematical publications.
The AMS also publishes multiple journals:
General
Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society - published quarterly,
Electronic Research Announcements of the American Mathematical Society - online only

57. Dusa McDuff
She is a member of the american Mathematical Society and is on the editorialboard of Notices of the american Mathematical Society, a publication of the AMS
http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/mcduff.htm
Dusa McDuff
October 18, 1945 -
Written by Lauren Love, Class of 1999 (Agnes Scott College)
Don't tell Dusa McDuff that girls can't "do" math the 1991 winner of the Ruth Lyttle Satter prize and Honorary Foreign Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences knew at quite an early age that she would one day be a mathematician. The problem for Professor McDuff was never what to become, but how to become it: "My life as a young mathematician was much harder than it needed to be because I was so isolated. I had no role models, and my first attempts at inventing a lifestyle were not very successful" (NAMS 186). Margaret Dusa McDuff was born in London on October 18, 1945. She grew up in Scotland where her father was a professor who taught genetics and wrote books about such diverse topics as art and philosophy. Unlike the mothers of her friends, Dusa's mother worked also, as an architect, and perhaps it was through her that Dusa got a first glimpse at the difficulties of being a professional woman: her mother worked with the civil service in Edinburgh because as a female no other jobs in such a non-traditional field were open to her. But the fact that Dusa's mother was an architect in a time when most women did not work outside the home seems less peculiar in light of the phenomenal women from whom she (and Dusa) descends. Dusa's maternal grandmother was an author and political activist, and her great-grandmother wrote a book in 1911 that is used as a text in colleges even today!

58. Cathleen Morawetz
Cathleen has been a trustee for the american Mathematical Society, the Alfred P.Sloan Foundation, and Princeton University. She was a Guggenheim Fellow in
http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/morawetz.htm
Cathleen Morawetz
May 5, 1923 -
Written by Tyler Knowles, Class of 2000 (Agnes Scott College)
Cathleen Morawetz was born on May 5, 1923, in Toronto, Canada. Her Irish parents were John Synge, a mathematician, and Eleanor Mabel Synge. Cathleen obtained her Bachelor of Arts degree in Mathematics in 1943 at the University of Toronto, where she studied with Cecilia Krieger . The following year she worked as a technical assistant for inspection of the Board of the United Kingdom and Canada. She received her master's degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1946. Cathleen then moved to New York where she edited a book called Supersonic Flow and Shock Waves by Richard Courant and Kurt Friedrichs of New York University. On the completion of the book, she began writing her Ph.D. thesis on imploding shock waves. In 1950, while researching her thesis, Cathleen became a naturalized U.S. citizen. She earned her Ph.D. at New York University in 1951. Cathleen then became a research associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for a year but returned to NYU in 1952. Since then she has spent her entire career there. She was a research associate for five years, then became an assistant professor in 1957, associate professor in 1960, and professor in 1965. She was appointed associate director of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences in 1978 and deputy director in 1981. She has served as director of the National Cash Register Corporation since 1978 and as chair of the mathematics department of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences from 1981- 1984. Cathleen became the first woman in the United States to head a mathematical institute when she was named director of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences in 1984. She is now Professor Emeritus at New York University-Courant Institute.

59. Eleanor Green Dawley Jones Mathematician
american Mathematical Monthly (May, 1967). Bibliography. american Men and Women of american Mathematical Monthly 88 p.593, 598599. Top of Page
http://www.princeton.edu/~mcbrown/display/eleanor_jones.html

60. Special Development Fund
As you may know, the american Mathematical Society has asked its members to makea donation to the SDF when paying their membership fees.
http://www.mathunion.org/Activities/Travel_Grants_DC/fund.html
    Special Development Fund
    The Special Development Fund helps IMU to fulfill the important obligation of helping developing countries within the framework of mathematical research. The means of the Fund, which go unreduced to mathematicians from developing countries, are used primarily for travel grants to young mathematicians to make it possible for them to participate in International Congresses of Mathematicians. The Executive Committee of IMU elects an international committee to distribute the grants.
    Means to the Special Development Fund come from donations. Donations can be sent, at any time and in any convertible currency, to the following account: IMU Account at the Institute for Advanced Study
    PNC Bank
    76 Nassau Street
    Princeton, NJ 08540
    ABA # 031207607
    Account # 8011913872 The goal now is to collect funds for travel grants for the 2006 International Congress of Mathematicians in Madrid, to have as many qualified young mathematicians from developing countries as participants. For the ICM-2002 in Beijing the IMU financed the trip of 95 young mathematicians and the Chinese Local Organizing Committee kindly covered the local expenses. We hope to increase this number to 120 or even 130 in 2006. As you may know, the American Mathematical Society has asked its members to make a donation to the SDF when paying their membership fees. We hope that other societies could consider a similar action. Also, from the start the London Mathematical Society and the Royal Society have made major contributions. Other countries that have been making important contributions to the Fund are: Brazil, Germany, Finland, France, Holland, Japan, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom.

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