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         American Mathematicians:     more books (100)
  1. Mathematical Sciences Professional Directory by American Mathematical Society, 1998-10
  2. Robert Lee Moore, 1882-1974 by Raymond Louis Wilder, 1976
  3. Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush, Engineer of the American Century by G. Pascal Zachary, 1999-06-11
  4. Quantum Fields and Strings: A Course for Mathematicians by Pierre Deligne, 2000-04-27
  5. Quantum Mechanics for Mathematicians (Graduate Studies in Mathematics) by Leon A. Takhtajan, 2008-08-15
  6. Chaotic Elections! A Mathematician Looks at Voting by Donald G. Saari, 2001-04-03
  7. A Mathematician's Survival Guide: Graduate School and Early Career Development by Steven G. Krantz, 2003-07-29
  8. Famous Puzzles of Great Mathematicians by Miodrag S. Petkovic, 2009-09-02
  9. Chapter 16 of Ramanujan's Second Notebook Theta Functions and Q-Series (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society) by C. Adiga, B. Berndt, et all 1985-03
  10. Mathematicians in Love by Rudy Rucker, 2008-07-08
  11. The Survival of a Mathematician by Steven G. Krantz, 2008-12-22
  12. Portraits of the Earth: A Mathematician Looks at Maps (Mathematical World) by Timothy G. Feeman, 2002-09-30
  13. The Hinge of the World: In Which Professor Galileo Galilei, Chief Mathematician and Philosopher to His Serene Highness the Grand Duke of Tuscany, and His Holiness Urban VIII by Richard N. Goodwin, 1998-06
  14. Persuasion for a Mathematician by Joanne Page, 2003-01

61. IMU Bulletin No 41, April 1998
1991 american Mathematical Society US $14.772,93 Royal Society US $ 8.780 1994 american Mathematical Society US $30.550,06 Mathematical Society of Japan
http://www.mathunion.org/Publications/Bulletins/41/news.html
    IMU International Mathematical Union
    Bulletin no 41, April 1998
    IMU News
  • IMU Homepage electronical World Mathematical Year 2000 newsletter
  • Special Development Fund World Directory of Mathematicians - 1998
    IMU and ICM on the World Wide Web
    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:

62. American Mathematical Society Meeting 09/99
WHAT american Mathematical Society (Central United States and Central Canadasection). WHEN 3 pm Friday (Oct. 8) through 1 pm Sunday (Oct. 10)
http://www.utexas.edu/opa/news/99newsreleases/nr_199909/nr_math990928.html
American Mathematical Society meeting (Central United States and Central Canada section), Oct. 8-10
September 28, 1999
Contact:
Karen Bordelon, 471-1442 kjb@mail.utexas.edu latest news
from UT Office of Public Affairs
P O Box Z
Austin, Texas
FAX (512) 471-5812 WHAT: American Mathematical Society (Central United States and Central Canada section) WHEN: 3 p.m. Friday (Oct. 8) through 1 p.m. Sunday (Oct. 10) WHERE: Robert Lee Moore (RLM) building and Burdine Hall. (Maps of UT Austin can be obtained at www.utexas.edu/maps/main) BACKGROUND: The University of Texas at Austin department of mathematics hosts the fall meeting of the American Mathematical Society (central section). The conference will feature more than 20 sessions, with most covering traditional areas of math, but also will include sessions on practical applications of mathematics and cooperation with scientists from other disciplines, such as
  • mathematical finance (which relates probability and investment strategies);
  • harmonic analysis (which applies to music synthesizers and signal analysis); and

63. Online Ethics Center: AMS Ethical Guidelines
Ethical Guidelines of the american Mathematical Society. To assist in its charteredgoal, the furtherance of the interests of mathematical scholarship
http://onlineethics.org/codes/AMScode.html
onlineethics.org The Online Ethics Center for Engineering and Science
American Mathematical Society Ethical Guidelines
Prepared by the Special Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics, which consisted of Murray Gerstenhaber, Frank Gilfeather, Elliott Lieb, and Linda Keen (chair), and adopted by the Council in the Spring of 1995 in the name of the Society.
Introduction
I. Mathematical Research And Its Presentation
II. Social Responsibility of Mathematicians
III. Education and Granting of Degrees ...
IV. Publications
Ethical Guidelines of the American Mathematical Society
To assist in its chartered goal, "...the furtherance of the interests of mathematical scholarship and research", and to help in the preservation of that atmosphere of mutual trust and ethical behavior required for science to prosper, the American Mathematical Society, through its Council, sets forth the following guidelines. While it speaks only for itself, these guidelines reflect its expectations of behavior both for its members and for all members of the wider mathematical community including institutions engaged in the education or employment of mathematicians or in the publication of mathematics. It is not intended that something not mentioned here is necessarily outside the scope of AMS interest. These guidelines are not a complete expression of the principles that underlie them but will, it is expected, be modified and amplified by events and experience. These are guidelines, not a collection of rigid rules.

64. Stevens Hosts American Mathematical Society, April 28-29
Stevens hosts american Mathematical Society, April 2829. More than 250 mathematiciansfrom 31 states and 22 countries will come to the campus of Stevens
http://www.stevensnewsservice.com/pr/pr188.htm
News Service April 20, 2001 Contact:
Patrick A. Berzinski
(201) 216-5687 or pberzins@stevens.edu Stevens hosts American Mathematical Society, April 28-29
More than 250 mathematicians from 31 states and 22 countries will come to the campus of Stevens Institute of Technology for the Eastern Section Spring Meeting of the American Mathematical Society. The scheduled talks, symposia, and other presentations will take place the weekend of April 28-29, 2001, at various locations on the Stevens campus. Note: Registration fees are waived for members of the press who wish to attend. For the official AMS website regarding the event, including contact information and the full program for the two days, please visit http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2056_program.html Among the presentations will be four from members of Stevens' Department of Mathematical Sciences. Also, five of the department's faculty have organized sessions on six different areas of research. Officiating at the occasion will be Dr. Robert Gilman, associate dean for research affairs at Stevens' School of Applied Sciences and Liberal Arts. The topic of the talk will be Combinatorics, quantum computers, and cellular phones

65. Blackwell-Tapia Lecture Series Is Inaugurated At Cornell Conference
Blackwell is a former vicepresident of the american Mathematical Society and aformer president of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.
http://www.siam.org/siamnews/01-01/blacktap.htm
search:
Blackwell-Tapia Lecture Series Is Inaugurated at Cornell Conference
Melissa Castillo-Garsow
On May 7 and 8, Cornell University held a conference to inaugurate the David Blackwell and Richard Tapia Distinguished Lecture Series in the Mathematical and Statistical Sciences. Both Blackwell, a professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, and Tapia, the Noah Harding Professor of Computational and Applied Mathematics at Rice University, attended the two-day conference, which highlighted their contributions as well as those of a new generation of under-represented minority mathematicians and statisticians. The lecture series, established at the initiative of Cornell administrators and faculty, will be given every two years by a distinguished African American, Latino, or Native American mathematician. The lecturer will receive a plaque and an honorarium of $1000. The first speaker will be selected in 2002. "We, the minority communities at Cornell University, would like to honor the mathematical and personal achievements of David Blackwell and Richard Tapia," said Carlos Castillo-Chavez, one of the organizers of the conference and an instigator of the new lecture series. "We feel that it is critically important that current and future generations of African Americans, Latinos, and Native Americans, as well as current and future generations of non-minorities, learn and remember the achievements of these two extraordinarily talented and productive mathematicians. The establishment of this lecture series also recognizes their continuous efforts in creating, supporting, and maintaining opportunities for minority scientists, statisticians and mathematicians across the nation."

66. Recent Acquisitions
(Memoirs of the american Mathematical Society; no. 818) Supersymmetry formathematicians an introduction. american Mathematical Society, 2004.
http://math.lib.umn.edu/jan05.html
Mathematics Library
Recent Acquisitions
January 2005
Previous Lists: October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
*** Periodicals ***
Clarke, Francis.
Necessary conditions in dynamic optimization.
(Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society; no. 816).
American Mathematical Society, 2005.
Link to MNCAT

Fernandez de Bobadilla, Javier
Moduli spaces of polynomials in two variables.
(Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society; no. 817).
American Mathematical Society, 2005.
Link to MNCAT
Medts, Tom An algebraic structure for Moufang quadrangles. (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society; no. 818) American Mathematical Society, 2005. Link to MNCAT Andreatta, F. (Fabrizio) Hilbert modular forms : mod p and p-adic aspects. (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society; no.819). American Mathematical Society, 2005. Link to MNCAT Kaimanovich, Vadim A. Conformal and harmonic measures on laminations associated with rational maps. (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society; no. 820). American Mathematical Society, 2005.

67. Scout Report Archives
The american Mathematical Society (AMS) offers this textbook on The americanMathematical Society has posted talks from an AMS Special Session on
http://scout.wisc.edu/Archives/SPT--AdvancedSearch.php?FieldName=Publisher&Field

68. Science & Technology At Scientific American.com: Stack 'em Tight -- Has An Ameri
Has an american mathematician solved a centuriesold puzzle about packing spheres?By Kristin Leutwyler. 1 2 next ». Spheres. Image SAMUEL P. FERGUSON,
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=0001BEBC-6D87-1CE2-95FB809EC588EF21

69. Math Department Honors Elbert Cox
As the american Mathematical Monthly article observes, Africanamerican academicsof that era did not have the opportunity to work at research universities
http://www.news.cornell.edu/Chronicle/02/2.28.02/ElbertCox.html
Math department honors CU pioneer Elbert Cox, first black math Ph.D.
By Lissa Harris In 1917 three young men graduated from Indiana University with the word "Colored" emblazoned across their academic transcripts. One of them, Elbert Frank Cox, would go on to enter Cornell and become the first black man in history to receive a doctorate in pure mathematics and the first African American to be inducted into the American Mathematical Society (AMS). Elbert Cox, circa 1925, from "A Century of Mathematics in America, Part III," (American Mathematical Society, Providence: 1989). Reprinted by permission of the AMS. Cox's achievements were exceptional, especially for his time. In 1925 the year he graduated from Cornell only 28 doctoral degrees were awarded in mathematics in the entire nation, and up until that year, fewer than 50 African Americans had received doctorates of any kind. Cornell's Department of Mathematics has been honoring Cox this February Black History Month as a pioneer and a key figure in the history of American mathematics. By becoming only the second black student to receive a doctorate in any subject from Cornell (Thomas Wyatt Turner, who received his Ph.D. in biology in 1921, was the first), Cox helped to open the door for other black doctoral candidates. In a letter to mathematics librarian Steven Rockey, Charles W. Carrey Jr., a scholar researching Cox's life and work, notes that partly thanks to Cox's pioneering Ph.D., by1943 another 23 African Americans had received doctorates from Cornell. That number included seven who received their degrees in either mathematics or physics. "His accomplishment helped to make it possible for other black mathematicians, such as Dudley Welcon Woodard, William Waldron Shiefflin Claytor, Marjorie Lee Brown, Evelyn Boyd Granville and David Blackwell, to receive their doctorates from American universities," Carrey wrote.

70. The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Acknowledgments
on Complex Analysis, american Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 1998.Bing, RH, The Geometric Topology of 3Manifolds, american Mathematical Society
http://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/acknowledge.phtml
Select a mirror NDSU (main) AMS Bielefeld Ole Miss IMPA
Ulf Rehmann and Universit¤t Bielefeld
American Mathematical Society
Mathematical Reviews
The hospitality of the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute.
Data Contributors
    Richard A. Askey, University of Wisconsin
    June E. Barrow-Green, The Open University, UK
    Sigmundur Gudmundsson
    , Lund University
    H¥kan Hedenmalm, Lund University
    Jan Johansson, Stockholm University
    Wilfred Kaplan, University of Michigan
    Victor J. Katz, University of D. C. Christer Kiselman, Uppsala University, Sweden Pavel Kitsul, Minnesota State U., Mankato Ernst Kunz, University of Regensburg, Germany Saunders Mac Lane, University of Chicago Karen Hunger Parshall, University of Virginia Joanne Peeples, El Paso Community College Tomaž Pisanski, University of Ljubljana Jozef Przytycki, George Washington University Ari Renvall, University of Turku V. Frederick Rickey, U. S. Military Academy Donald G. Saari, Northwestern University Hamed Sallam, Minnesota State U., Mankato David Singmaster, South Bank University, London

71. Book List From The Notices Of The American Mathematical Society, May 2005
Book List from the Notices of the american Mathematical Society, May 2005.
http://finmath.com/Kolmogorov/booklist.html
Book List from the Notices of the American Mathematical Society
May 2005
January February March April ... December
Rebecca Goldstein Incompleteness: The Proof and Paradox of Kurt Godel (Great Discoveries)
Alan Mourice Turing The Essential TURING: Seminal Writings in Computing, Logic, Philosophy, Artificial Intellegence, And Artificial Life; Plus The Secrets Of Enigma , Edited by B. Jack Copeland
Richard P. Feynman Perfectly Reasonable Deviations from the Beaten Track: The Letters of Richard P. Feynman , Edited by Michelle Feynman
More books by Richard P. Feynman Flo Conway, Jim Siegelman Dark Hero of the Information Age: In Search of Norbert Wiener
Bulent Atalay Math and the Mona Lisa: The Art and Science of Leonardo da Vinci
ARCHIMEDES The Works of Archimedes: Volume 1, The Two Books On the Sphere and the Cylinder : Translation and Commentary , Edited by Reviel Netz
Michael Smith, Ralph Erskine (Editors) Action This Day
Dan Rockmore Stalking the Riemann Hypothesis : The Quest to Find the Hidden Law of Prime Numbers
A. K. Dewdney Beyond Reason : Eight Great Problems That Reveal the Limits of Science
John D. Barrow

72. For Teachers Interested In A Women In Math Course With Portions Dedicated To Bot
The Names of the Curve of Agnesi by TF Mulcrone, american Mathematical Monthly,64, Issue 5 (5/1957), p. 359361. Discussions Relating to Generalizations
http://www.mathsci.appstate.edu/~sjg/womeninmath/teachers.html
For teachers interested in a women in mathematics course with portions dedicated to both mathematics content and equity issues.
Syllabus Includes course goals
Daily Class Highlights Includes daily classroom activities, nightly reading assignments and paper due dates.
MathFest 2000 Talk Includes info for teachers on time and effort spent in the course and on what the students learned.
See also Spring 2001 Women and Minorities in Math - A Course with Significant Mathematical Content
Contents
  • Hypatia and her mathematics
  • References Placed in Folders for Papers
  • Equity References Used
  • Women in Math References
    References Used for Hypatia
  • Grinstein's Women of Mathematics - A Biobibliographic Sourcebook
  • To show the danger of relying on printed material - Lynn Osen's chapter on Hypatia, which contains info about Hypatia that is known to be false. (She couldn't have gone mountainclimbing in Alexandria, and the words attributed to her are not hers - we have no letters written by Hypatia. )
  • Textual Studies in Ancient and Medieval Geometry by Wilbur Knorr
  • The Primary Sources for the Life and Work of Hypatia of Alexandria, by Michael A.B. Deakin
  • 73. ERIC Clearinghouse For Science, Mathematics, And Environmental Education
    Mathematical Patterns in African american Hairstyles African americanMathematicians. This page describes an exhibit entitled Pioneering African
    http://www.stemworks.org/bhm.html
    ...helping you find the pieces! African Americans Do Science
    Search This Site
    Search WWW AskERIC Browse By Subject Area ERIC Search Science
    Education
    Mathematics ...
    Education
    This Web page features links to resources highlighting the contributions of African Americans to science, mathematics, engineering, and technology in our society. If you have suggestions for other resources that should be listed here, please contact us by e-mail and share your ideas. Black history month 2000 Databases The Faces of Science: African Americans in the Sciences
    This valuable resource provides the following:
    • Biographic profiles of individuals from all fields of the natural sciences, mathematics, computer science, technology, and medicine.
    • Statistics and bibliographies for research on African Americans in science and technology.
    Black Facts Online
    This website offers a database that can be searched using keywords. Search for biographic information by using either the names of individuals or terms like science, chemistry, etc. Note, the search engine seeks exact matches, so using "chemistry" and "chemist" will yield different results. Also, abbreviated terms like "math" will yield different results than "mathematics." Happy searching!
    African American Inventors
    Highlights the contributions of 22 African Americans featured on a Dow-sponsored poster for Black History Month.

    74. Crossroads Revisited Project
    The american Mathematical Association of TwoYear Colleges american MathematicalAssociation of Two-Year Colleges Montgomery College Rockville, MD
    http://www.amatyc.org/Crossroads/revision.html
    THE CROSSROADS REVISITED PROJECT
    The American Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges
    The AMATYC Standards 2006 Annotated Outline Version 4.0 is now available. Click here http://www.amatyc.org/Crossroads/CRRV4.html for more information on how to download the entire document, individual chapters, or a Brief Outline, and how to provide feedback to the Writing Team through an Online Questionnaire (response requested by December 15, 2003). The Crossroads Revisited Project is well underway. The purpose of the five-year project is to revisit the AMATYC document, Crossroads in Mathematics: Standards for Introductory College Mathematics Before Calculus in light of current issues and future trends in the teaching and learning of mathematics in the first two years of college. Read the Executive Summary of the Associate Review Group (ARG) Members of the Project Planning Committee Project Director: Susan S. Wood, J. Sargeant Reynolds CC, swood@jsr.vccs.edu Project Co-Director: Sadie Bragg, Borough of Manhattan CC, sbragg@bmcc.cuny.edu

    75. Crossroads Revisited Project
    The american Mathematical Association of TwoYear Colleges. Participants in theCrossroad Revisited project (as of March 2004)
    http://www.amatyc.org/Crossroads/revisited.html
    THE CROSSROADS REVISITED PROJECT
    The American Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges
    Participants in the Crossroad Revisited project (as of March 2004)
    Crossroads Revisited Writing Team Meets in Rockville, Maryland
    The Crossroads Revisited Project held a meeting in February 2004 at
    Montgomery College in Rockville, MD, hosted by AMATYC President Judy Ackerman.
    Project Planning Team members, Writing Team Chairs, Section Writers, and Special
    Advisors reviewed feedback on the AMATYC Standards 2006 Annotated Outline
    Version 4.0
    , finalized the new set of Student Support Standards, and brainstormed about
    the digital products that will accompany the written document, scheduled for release in
    Fall 2006.
    Click here to download a short PowerPoint presentation listing the revised Standards
    Supporting Student Learning (document size is 2.7 Mb).
    You can help!

    76. Andrew Granville -- Expository Papers
    It s as easy as abc Notices of the american Mathematical Society, Prime number races / Carreras de numeros primos american Mathematical Monthly and
    http://www.dms.umontreal.ca/~andrew/Expository.html
    Publications by year: Preprints
    Andrew Granville
    's expository papers By subject: Analytic Algebraic Algorithmic , and Combinatorial number theory, other research , and expository writing.
    Topics: Surveys, Computational number theory, distribution of primes, biographies, binomial coefficients,
    Diophantine equations and reviews.
    Surveys with Tom Tucker
  • Article and AMS Review
  • It's as easy as abc Notices of the American Mathematical Society , vol (2002), pages 1224-1231
    Computational number theory
  • Article and AMS Review
  • It is easy to determine whether a given integer is prime, Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society (2005), pages 3-38
  • Article Smooth numbers: Computational number theory and beyond MSRI workshop , proceedings
  • Article and AMS Review
  • Primality testing and Carmichael numbers Notices of the American Mathematical Society vol (1992), pages 696700
  • Article Search for a practical primality test Mathematics Forum of the Punjab Mathematical Society (1996-7) pages 4852
    Distribution of primes
    with Greg Martin
  • Article and in Spanish Prime number races / Carreras de numeros primos American Mathematical Monthly and La Gaceta de le Real Sociedad Matematica Espanola vol (2005) pages 197-240
  • Article and in French Prime Possibilities and Quantum Chaos
  • 77. ENC Online: Curriculum Resources: American Mathematical Society (AMS) (ENC-01174
    This World Wide Web (WWW) site, created by the american Mathematical Society (AMS),is designed principally to serve AMS members and professional
    http://www.enc.org/resources/records/0,1240,011745,00.shtm
    Skip Navigation You Are Here ENC Home Curriculum Resources Search the Site More Options Don't lose access to ENC's web site! Beginning in August, goENC.com will showcase the best of ENC Online combined with useful new tools to save you time. Take action todaypurchase a school subscription through goENC.com Classroom Calendar Digital Dozen ENC Focus ... Ask ENC Explore online lesson plans, student activities, and teacher learning tools. Search Browse Resource of the Day About Curriculum Resources Read articles about inquiry, equity, and other key topics for educators and parents. Create your learning plan, read the standards, and find tips for getting grants.
    American Mathematical Society (AMS)
    Grades: 9 10 11 12 Post-Sec.
    URL: http://e-math.ams.org/
    ENC#: ENC-011745
    Publisher: American Mathematical Society (AMS)
    Date:
    Similar Records
    Subjects:
    Mathematics

    Calculus. Careers. Curriculum design. Instructional issues. Journals. Mathematicians. Professional development. Technology. Resource Type:
    Professional development; Professional opportunities; Professional organizations. Media Type:
    Internet resource.

    78. Powell's Books - Mathematical Aspects Of Artificial Intelligence :American Mathe
    Mathematical aspects of artificial intelligence american Mathematical Society ISBN 0821806114; Subtitle (american Mathematical Society short course
    http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=4-0821806114-0

    79. Preuves, Plus De Références Mathématiques Et Mathématiciens
    Chaitin JG (1975) Randomness and Mathematical Proof. Scientific american. 232(5)pp.4752 Bulletin of the american mathematical society 29(1) 1-13
    http://www.lettredelapreuve.it/PreuveRefMatheux.html

    80. AIMS
    AIMS, the american Institute of Mathematical Sciences, is an internationalorganization for the advancement and dissemination of mathematical sciences.
    http://aimsciences.org/
    Advanced Search Order Info About Us Contact Us ... A I M S CONFERENCES
    6th Internatinal Conference on Dynamical Systems and Differential Equations June 25 - 28, 2006. in France [More...] Journals AIMS Meetings Math Source AIMS , the American Institute of Mathematical Sciences, is an international organization for the advancement and dissemination of mathematical sciences. AIMS promotes mathematical sciences education through its publications and conferences. The mission of AIMS is to foster and enhance interactions among a broad spectrum of mathematicians and scientists worldwide. 2 special issues on new trends on DE (volume 13 #4-5)

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