Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Bochner Salomon
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Bochner Salomon:     more books (34)
  1. Several Complex Variables by Salomon & William Ted Martin Bochner, 1967
  2. Fouriersche Integrale by Salomon Bochner, 1990-12
  3. Several Complex Variables by Salomon; Wiliam Ted Martin Bochner, 1961
  4. Problems In Analysis A Symposium In Honor Of Salomon Bochner
  5. Several Complex Variables. Princeton Mathematical Series, Volume 10 by Salomon Bochner, William Ted Martin, 1948

41. Collected Works In Mathematics And Statistics
salomon bochner, Boethius, Harald Bohr, George Boole bochner, salomon, 18991982,Collected papers of salomon bochner, 4, QA 3 B5719 1992, Killam
http://www.mathstat.dal.ca/~dilcher/collwks.html
Collected Works in Mathematics and Statistics
This is a list of Mathematics and Statistics collected works that can be found at Dalhousie University and at other Halifax universities. The vast majority of these works are located in the Killam Library on the Dalhousie campus. A guide to other locations is given at the end of this list. If a title is owned by both Dalhousie and another university, only the Dalhousie site is listed. For all locations, and for full bibliographic details, see the NOVANET library catalogue This list was compiled, and the collection is being enlarged, with the invaluable help of the Bibliography of Collected Works maintained by the Cornell University Mathematics Library. The thumbnail sketches of mathematicians were taken from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive at the University of St. Andrews. For correction, comments, or questions, write to Karl Dilcher ( dilcher@mscs.dal.ca You can scroll through this list, or jump to the beginning of the letter:
A B C D ... X-Y-Z
A
[On to B] [Back to Top]
N.H. Abel

42. Geneology
Sam Karlin (Ph. D. 1947, Princeton) was a student of salomon bochner. salomonbochner (Ph. D. 1921, Berlin) was a student of Erhard Schmidt
http://www.math.vanderbilt.edu/~schumake/geneology.html
Geneology
  • Larry Schumaker (Ph. D. 1966, Stanford) was a student of Sam Karlin
  • Sam Karlin (Ph. D. 1947, Princeton) was a student of Salomon Bochner
  • Salomon Bochner (Ph. D. 1921, Berlin) was a student of Erhard Schmidt
  • Erhard Schmidt (Ph. D. 1905, Gottingen) was a student of David Hilbert
  • David Hilbert (Ph. D. 1885, Konigsberg) was a student of C. L. Ferdinand Lindemann
  • C. L. Ferdinand Lindemann (Ph. D. 1873, Erlangen) was a student of Felix Klein
  • Felix Klein (Ph. D. 1868, Bonn) was a student of Julius Plucker and Rudolf Lipschitz.
  • Julius Plucker (Ph. D. 1823, Marburg) - advisor unknown
  • Rudolf Lipschitz (Ph. D. 1853, Berlin) was a student of Gustav Dirichlet
  • Gustav Dirichlet (Ph. D. 1827, Bonn) was a student of Simeon Poisson and Jean-Baptiste Fourier
  • Both Simeon Poisson and Jean-Baptiste Fourier were students of Joseph Lagrange
  • 43. Place: General Space Resources
    bochner, salomon. Space , in Dictionary of the History of Ideas. New YorkCharles Scribner s Sons, 1973, v.5 294306. Bradie, Michael and Comar Duncan.
    http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~janzb/place/space.htm
    R e s e a r c h o n P l a c e S p a c e
    Table of Contents
    S
    T
    A
    R
    T Main Page Who Helped With This? What Should I Read First? Advanced Search in ... Site Reviews
    P
    L
    A
    C
    E
    S
    P
    A
    C
    E
    I
    N Anthropology
    Archaeology
    Applied Sciences,
    Technology
    ... Virtual Places and Cyberspace, Presence
    R
    E
    L
    A
    T
    E
    D
    T
    E
    R
    M
    S Genius Loci, Spirit of Place "A Sense of Place" & related terms Home Embodiment ... Platial Anxieties Space Globalization, Glocalization
    A
    L
    L
    Conferences, Other CFP Journals On-line Documents A-G On-line Documents H-P ... Why I did all this B. Janz: Home Page Email
    General Resources on Space
    See the "General Bibliography" section below for both clickable on-line papers as well as references to publishers' websites Search the "Research on Place and Space" Website
    Websites
  • Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis
  • Espace
  • Spatial Culture
  • Spatial Analysis Starting Points ...
  • Spatial Sciences Institute
    Journals
  • Space and Culture Space, outside ourselves, invades and ravishes things: If you want to achieve the existence of a tree, Invest it with inner space, this space That has its being in you. Surround it with compulsions
  • 44. John Von Neumann
    His Academy of Sciences biography, written by salomon bochner 1958, bochner,salomon. 1958. John von Neumann , Biographical Memoirs, Vol.
    http://ei.cs.vt.edu/~history/VonNeumann.html
    John Louis von Neumann Born 28 December 1903, Budapest, Hungary; Died 8 February 1957, Washington DC; Brilliant mathematician, synthesizer, and promoter of the stored program concept, whose logical design of the IAS became the prototype of most of its successors - the von Neumann Architecture. Educ: Prof. Exp: Privatdozent, University of Berlin, 1927-30; Visiting Professor, Princeton University, 1930-53; Professor of Mathematics, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University, 1933-57; Honors and Awards: D.Sc. (Hon), Princeton University, 1947; Medal for Merit (Presidential Award), 1947; Distinguished Civilian Service Award, 1947; D.Sc. (Hon), University of Pennsylvania, 1950; D.Sc. (Hon), Harvard University, 1950; D.Sc. (Hon), University of Istanbul, 1952; D.Sc. (Hon), Case Institute of Technology, 1952; D.Sc. (Hon), University of Maryland, 1952; D.Sc. (Hon), Institute of Polytechnics, Munich, 1953; Medal of Freedom (Presidential Award), 1956; Albert Einstein Commemorative Award, 1956; Enrico Fermi Award, 1956; Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Member, Academiz Nacional de Ciencias Exactas, Lima, Peru; Member, Acamedia Nazionale dei Lincei, Rome, Italy; Member, National Academy of Sciences; Member, Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences and Letters, Amsterdam, Netherlands; Member, Information Processing Hall of Fame, Infomart, Dallas TX, 1985. During 1936 through 1938 Alan Turing was a graduate student in the Department of Mathematics at Princeton and did his dissertation under Alonzo Church. Von Neumann invited Turing to stay on at the Institute as his assistant but he preferred to return to Cambridge; a year later Turing was involved in war work at Bletchley Park. This visit occurred shortly after Turing's publication of his 1934 paper "On Computable Numbers with an Application to the Entscheidungs-problem" which involved the concepts of logical design and the universal machine. It must be concluded that von Neumann knew of Turing's ideas, though whether he applied them to the design of the IAS Machine ten years later is questionable.

    45. Dictionary Of The History Of Ideas
    salomon bochner. Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, Princeton University; Professorof Mathematics and Chairman of the Department, Rice University.
    http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/cgi-local/DHI/dhicontrib.cgi?id=dv1-cont

    46. Dictionary Of The History Of Ideas
    salomon bochner, Eclosion and Synthesis, Perspectives on the History of Knowledge salomon bochner. See also Infinity v267 ; Mathematical Rigor v3-20
    http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/cgi-local/DHI/dhiana.cgi?id=dv3-21

    47. SCIENTIFIC REFERENCES
    bochner, salomon; Martin, William Ted, Several Complex Variables, Princeton Univ.Press (1948). Bohm 1937 Bohm, David, Quantum Theory Dover Reprint (1984)
    http://graham.main.nc.us/~bhammel/FCCR/refs.html
    for Physics Pages Mathematics Pages and Music Pages
    [Abbot 1981] Abbot, L. F.; Wise, M. B., "Dimension of a quantum-mechanical path" Amer. J. of Phys. [Abraham 1967] Abraham, Ralph; Marsden, Jerrold E., Foundations of Mechanics, W. A. Benjamin (1967). [Abramowitz 1965] Abramowitz, M. and Stegun, I. A. (Eds.), Handbook of Mathematical Functions Dover (1965). [Adler 1965] Adler, Ronald; Bazin, Maurice; Schiffer, Menachem, Introduction to General Relativity, McGraw-Hill (1965). [Ahmavaara 1965a] Ahmavaara, Yrjo, "The Structure of Space and the Formalism of Relativistic Quantum Field Theory I.", Jour. Math. Phys. [Ahmavaara 1965b] Ahmavaara, Yrjo, "The Structure of Space and the Formalism of Relativistic Quantum Field Theory II.", Jour. Math. Phys. [Anderson 1967] Anderson, James L., Principles of Relativity, Academic Press (1967). [Aristotle 1941] Aristotle, "Physica", in The Basic Works of Aristotle , Richard McKeon, Random House (1941). [Bacry 1973] "Projective Geometry and Dynamical Groups", Preprint Universit© d'Aix-Marseille (1973).

    48. 1998 Rado Lectures
    Jeff Cheeger received his Ph.D. in 1967 from Princeton, writing his dissertationunder the direction of salomon bochner. He has held faculty positions at
    http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/lectures/cheeger/
    The Ohio State University
    DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS

    announces the
    to be given by
    Jeff Cheeger
    Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences
    New York University
    on the topic
    Differentiability of Lipschitz Functions
    on Metric Measure Spaces
    Tue. October 20 4:30 p.m. Wed. October 21 4:30 p.m. Thurs. October 22 4:30 p.m. Room EA160 is in the Math Annex, 209 West 18th Avenue, and SM1153 is in Smith Laboratory, 174 W. 18th Avenue.
    Abstract
    A fundamental theorem of Rademacher asserts that Lipschitz functions f R n R , are differentiable almost everywhere. In our lectures, we will describe an extension of Rademacher's theorem to a certain class of metric measure spaces, ( Z ). As a consequence of this extension, much of that part of calculus which concerns first derivatives (although not, of neccessity, the implicit function theorem) generalizes to spaces in this class. In various natural examples, for instance, the boundaries at infinity of 2-dimensional hyperbolic buildings, the measure , is Hausdorff measure and the Hausdorff dimension exceeds the topological dimension. In particular, the differentiability of Lipschitz functions (suitably interpreted) does not imply the existence of points at which the underlying space has a linear structure at the infinitesimal level. Lecture 1. Overview and basic concepts

    49. From @ohstvma.acs.ohio-state.eduAT-NET@TECHNION.BITNET Sun Aug 30
    A twoyear National Research Fellowship enabled him to go to Princeton in 1937to work with salomon bochner, and to Cambridge, England in 1938,
    http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/JAT/DATA/ATNET/7.fixed
    From @ohstvma.acs.ohio-state.edu:AT-NET@TECHNION.BITNET Sun Aug 30 08:52:14 1992 Date: Sun, 30 Aug 1992 15:35:09 IST From: Allan Pinkus Subject: AT-NET Bulletin 7 Comments: To: "Approximation Theory Network"

    50. Boaz Tsaban's Home Page
    Boaz Tsaban Hillel Furstenberg - salomon bochner - Erhard Schmidt - DavidHilbert - CL Ferdinand Lindemann - C. Felix Klein - Rudolf Lipschitz
    http://www.cs.biu.ac.il/~tsaban/
    Boaz Tsaban's Home Page
    Coming conferences and workshops: My courses
    My CV

    My mathematics papers

    Selected quotations from my papers (and a riddle)
    ...
    Visit my city

    Erdos number.
    2, thanks to several papers with Saharon Shelah. (I was too young when Erdos was still working in mathematics, that is in his case, alive.) Geneology. Boaz Tsaban <- Hillel Furstenberg <- Salomon Bochner <- Erhard Schmidt <- David Hilbert <- C. L. Ferdinand Lindemann <- C. Felix Klein <- Rudolf Lipschitz <- Gustav Dirichlet <- Joseph Lagrange <- Leonhard Euler <- Johann Bernoulli <- Jacob Bernoulli.
    Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science
    Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel
    Office: Ziskind 204, Weizmann Institute of Science
    Phone: +972-8-934-3579
    Fax: +972-8-934-2945
    : "my first name"."my last name"@weizmann.ac.il

    51. Oakland Table: Talks: Historical Conceptions Of Place
    *bochner, salomon, Space, Dictionary of the History of Ideas, vol. IV, 1973, pp.295307. Charles Scribner s Sons, New York. Benveniste Émile, Indo-European
    http://www.wtp.org/archive/talks/roberttalk.html
    Historical Conceptions of Place
    Jean Robert
    This five-part seminar series explored the experiences of place and habitation from antiquity to modernity. The first session was devoted to examining the distinction between housing and dwelling. Houses, as the consequence of planning by architects, often inhibit dwelling. The act of dwelling engenders home instead of house, and the second session investigates the relation between house and home. Both these sessions pay attention to the autonomous powers of dwelling that are threatened or destroyed by housing. Oikos and domus are strong Greek and Latin words that historically relate to the acts of dwelling, of creating places. Both have given birth to numerous English words: e.g. ecology, economy, domestic, domesticity. The third and fourth sessions were historical hunts on the track of these words and of the concepts they convey in architectural theory and practice. The sessions attempted to recover the deep meanings of these terms beneath their ideological uses. The last session suggested that it is the technology of transportation that transforms perception and makes a space of the places we want to inhabit. The seminar ended with a question: did a special historical relation between writing and architecture not already prepare the ultimate spatialization of the dwelling experience?

    52. Von Neumann, John
    Bibliography bochner, salomon, Biographical Memoirs (of the National Academy ofSciences), vol. 32 (1958); Heims, SJ, John von Neumann and Norbert Wiener
    http://euler.ciens.ucv.ve/English/mathematics/neumann.html
    von Neumann, John
    In 1930, von Neumann journeyed to the United States, becoming a visiting lecturer at Princeton University; he was appointed professor there in 1931. He became one of the original six mathematics professors in 1933 at the newly founded Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, a position he kept for the remainder of his life. He became a U.S. citizen in 1937. During the 1940s and '50s, von Neumann was one of the pioneers of computer science. He made significant contributions to the development of logical design, advanced the theory of cellular AUTOMATA, advocated the adoption of the BIT as a measurement of computer memory, and solved problems in obtaining reliable information from unreliable computer components. Moreover, his involvement attracted the interest of fellow mathematicians and sped the development of computer science. During and after World War II, von Neumann served as a consultant to the armed forces, where his valuable contributions included a proposal of the implosion method for making a nuclear explosion and his espousal of the development of the hydrogen bomb. In 1955 he was appointed to the Atomic Energy Commission, and in 1956 he received its Enrico Fermi Award. He was one of the last generalists among contemporary scientists. Author: H. Howard Frisinger

    53. August 20 - Today In Science History
    salomon bochner. Born 20 Aug 1899; died 2 May 1982. Galicianborn Americanmathematician and educator responsible for the development of the bochner theorem
    http://www.todayinsci.com/8/8_20.htm
    Visit our new gallery of Perpetual Motion Machines through the centuries
    AUGUST 20 - BIRTHS Simon Kirwan Donaldson
    (source)
    Born 20 Aug 1957
    British mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1986 for his work in topology. Nearly all his work falls in the two realms of (1) differential geometry of holomorphic vector bundles and (2) applications of gauge theory to 4-manifold topology. Remarkably, Donaldson has solved problems of mathematics by using ideas from physics (wheras most mathematics in usually applied to physics). From the Yang-Mills generalizations of James Clerk Maxwell's electromagnetic equations, Donaldson used special solutions to these equations, called instantons, to look at general four-manifolds. After being awarded the Fields Medal, Donaldson continued his exploitation of ideas from physics with applications to mathematics. Roger Wolcott Sperry
    (source)
    Born 20 Aug 1913; died 17 Apr 1994
    American neurobiologist , corecipient with David Hunter Hubel and Torsten Nils Wiesel of the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1981 for their investigations of brain function, Sperry in particular for his study of functional specialization in the cerebral hemispheres. He was responsible for overturning the widespread belief that the left brain is dominant by showing that several cognitive abilities were localized in the right brain. He also provided experimental proof for the specificity of the reconnection of regenerating severed neurons in newts, which later led to new theories on how neurons grow. After 1965, his

    54. May 2 - Today In Science History
    salomon bochner. Died 2 May 1982 (born 20 Aug 1899) Galicianborn Americanmathematician and educator responsible for the development of the bochner theorem
    http://www.todayinsci.com/5/5_02.htm
    Visit our new gallery of Perpetual Motion Machines through the centuries
    MAY 2 - BIRTHS Emil W. Haury
    (source)
    Born 2 May 1904; died 5 Dec 1992.
    American anthropologist and archaeologist who investigated the ancient Indian civilizations of the southwestern United States and South America. His main concerns were the preceramic and ceramic archaeology of the southwestern United States and Mexico; the archaeology of the Hohokam, Mogollon, and Anasazi Indians of the southwestern United States; and the archaeology of the Chibcha Indians of the northern Andes. Benjamin Spock Born 2 May 1903; died 15 Mar 1998.
    American pediatrician who was the most influential child-care authority of the 20th century. His book Baby and Child Care sold over 50 million copies worldwide and was translated into 42 languages. His Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care (1946; 6th ed., 1992), influenced generations of parents and made his name a household word. Robert Williams Wood Born 2 May 1868; died 11 Aug 1955.
    U.S. physicist who extended the technique of Raman spectroscopy, a useful method of studying matter by analyzing the light scattered by it. Jesse William Lazear
    (source)
    Born 2 May 1866; died 26 Sep 1900.

    55. General Almost Automorphy -- Bochner 72 (10): 3815 -- Proceedings Of The Nationa
    salomon bochner. We will propose a very general setting for the following proposition.If a linear operator Lf is almost automorphic and all bounded
    http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/72/10/3815
    This Article Full Text (PDF) Alert me when this article is cited Alert me if a correction is posted Services Similar articles in this journal Alert me to new issues of the journal Add to My File Cabinet Download to citation manager PubMed Articles by Bochner, S. October 1, 1975
    General Almost Automorphy Salomon Bochner We will propose a very general setting for the following proposition. If a linear operator Lf is almost automorphic and all bounded solutions of the homogeneous equation Lg = are almost automorphic then, for almost automorphic , all bounded solutions of the inhomogeneous equation Lf = are also almost automorphic. The almost automorphy previously introduced by us will be generalized and diversified into a property which we will name ``A-invariance''; and we will deal with both strong solutions and weak solutions. We will also compare our A-invariance with minimality, and propose a rather thinned-out almost periodicity that will be associated with our A-invariance.
    Current Issue
    Archives Online Submission Info for Authors ... Site Map

    56. PNAS -- Index By Author (Oct 1975, 72 (10))
    J. Abstract Blacksin, Adam S. Abstract Blumberg, WE Abstract Boardman,NK Abstract bochner, salomon Abstract Boiteux, Arnold Abstract
    http://www.pnas.org/content/vol72/issue10/aindex.shtml
    Index by Author: Oct 1975; 72 (10) [Table of Contents] A B C ... H I J K L M ... W X Y Z
    A
    Adler, Julius [Abstract]
    Alberts, A. W. [Abstract]
    Alexander, N. M. [Abstract]
    Alvarez, Maria Isabel [Abstract]
    Andersen, Hans C. [Abstract]
    Anderson, Thomas F. [Abstract]
    Arnold, William J. [Abstract]
    Ashe, Hilary [Abstract]
    Auld, David S. [Abstract]
    Austen, K. Frank [Abstract]
    Axel, Richard [Abstract]
    B
    Baker, William K. [Abstract]
    Ballou, Clinton E. [Abstract]
    Baltimore, David [Abstract]
    Benveniste, Raoul E. [Abstract]
    Berger, Shelby L. [Abstract]
    Biehl, J. [Abstract]
    Blacksin, Adam S. [Abstract]
    Blumberg, W. E. [Abstract]
    Boardman, N. K. [Abstract]
    Bochner, Salomon [Abstract]
    Boiteux, Arnold [Abstract]
    Bollum, F. J. [Abstract]
    Bonner, James [Abstract]
    Bowers, Blair [Abstract]
    Brink, Frank [Abstract]
    Brinkhous, K. M. [Abstract]
    Brocas, H. [Abstract]
    Brownstein, M. J. [Abstract]
    Buchanan, George R. [Abstract]
    C
    Cabib, Enrico [Abstract]
    Castillo, C. L. [Abstract]
    Chalevelakis, G. [Abstract]
    Changeux, J. P. [Abstract]
    Chedid, L. [Abstract]
    Chen, Yi-Der [Abstract]
    Chou, Shao-Chia [Abstract]
    Clark, Brian R. [Abstract]
    Clegg, J. B.

    57. Bochner Obituary
    salomon bochner, 20 August 18992May 1982. salomon bochner s publishing careerin the history of science began in 1962 with an article entitled The Role of
    http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~scientia/bochner
    Salomon Bochner, 20 August 1899-2May 1982
    Salomon Bochner's publishing career in the history of science began in 1962 with an article entitled "The Role of Mathematics in the Rise of Mechanics," in American Scientist . He was nearing the end of an extraordinarily productive career as a mathematician, having to his credit at that point almost two hundred papers and a number of books on various aspects of mathematical analysis. Four years later Princeton University Press published his main contribution to the history of science, The Role of Mathematics in the Rise of Science , a collection of essays and biographical sketches. Thereafter Bochner went on to publish Eclosion and Synthesis: Perspectives on the History of Knowledge (1969) and about a score of articles on the history of science. Bochner was born in Krakow (then Austria-Hungary, now Poland) in 1899. After receiving his Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Berlin in 1921, he worked with Harald Bohr in Copenhagen, G. H. Hardy in Oxford, and J. E. Littlewood in Cambridge from 1924 to 1926. In 1926 he was appointed lecturer at the University of Munich. In 1933 he came to the United States and spent the next thirty-five years at Princeton University, where from 1951 until his retirement he was Henry Burchard Fine Professor of Mathematics. In 1968 Bochner became Edgar O'Dell Lovett Professor of Mathematics at Rice University and served for seven years as the chairman of the Mathematics Department. He remained active in departmental affairs until his death in 1982. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and served as vice-president of the American Mathematical Society, which awarded him the Leroy P. Steele Prize in 1979 for the cumulative effect of his researches.

    58. Scientia (Rice University)
    an institute for the history of science and culture founded by salomon bochner in 1981 by the mathematician and historian of science salomon bochner.
    http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~scientia/
    o
    Scientia 2005-2006 an institute for the history of science and culture founded by Salomon Bochner Our next Colloquium: Tuesday, 13 September 2005 4:00 p.m., McMurtry Auditorium (Room 1055), Duncan Hall Rice University Alastair J. Norcross Associate Professor, Philosophy Department, Rice University "Puppies, Pigs, and People: Eating Meat and Marginal Cases" 2005-2006 Scientia Program theme: Animals and Humans Scientia is an institute of Rice University faculty founded in 1981 by the mathematician and historian of science Salomon Bochner . Scientia provides an opportunity for scholarly discussion across disciplinary boundaries; its members and fellows come from a wide-range of academic disciplines. Scientia sponsors an annual series of colloquia (past years' programs are listed at bottom of this page) devoted to the exploration of a broad topic from a variety of points of view. These colloquia are open to the general public. The topic of the 2005-2006 Scientia colloquia is "Animals and Humans." Most of the colloquia consist of a speaker, a panel of discussants who respond to the speaker's remarks, and a period for questions from the audience. Unless otherwise noted, the colloquia will take place on the specified Tuesdays at 4:00 p.m., in the McMurtry Auditorium, Duncan Hall (enter the main/foyer entrance and then room 1055, the fourth door right). A wine and cheese reception will follow each event. The high point of the year is the distinguished Bochner Lecture , which is held in the evening (details forthcoming), instead of in the afternoon.

    59. Past AMS Officers And Lecturers
    Richard Brauer, 1948; GA Hedlund, 1949; Deane Montgomery, 1951; Alfred Tarski,1952; Antoni Zygmund, 1953; Nathan Jacobson, 1955; salomon bochner, 1956
    http://www.ams.org/secretary/lecturers.html
    American Mathematical Society
    Past Officers and Lecturers
    Presidents
    • J. H. Van Amringe, 1889, 1890 J. E. McClintock, 1891-1894 G. W. Hill, 1895, 1896 Simon Newcomb, 1897, 1898 R. S. Woodward, 1899, 1900 E. H. Moore, 1901, 1902 T. S. Fiske, 1903, 1904 W. F. Osgood, 1905, 1906 H. S. White, 1907, 1908 Maxime Bôcher, 1909, 1910 H. B. Fine, 1911, 1912 E. B. Van Vleck, 1913, 1914 E. W. Brown, 1915, 1916 L. E. Dickson, 1917, 1918 Frank Morley, 1919, 1920 G. A. Bliss, 1921, 1922 Oswald Veblen, 1923, 1924 G. D. Birkhoff, 1925, 1926 Virgil Snyder, 1927, 1928 E. R. Hedrick, 1929, 1930 L. P. Eisenhart, 1931, 1932 A. B. Coble, 1933, 1934 Solomon Lefschetz, 1935, 1936 R. L. Moore, 1937, 1938 G. C. Evans, 1939, 1940 Marston Morse, 1941, 1942 M. H. Stone, 1943, 1944 T. H. Hildebrandt, 1945, 1946 Einar Hille, 1947, 1948 J. L. Walsh, 1949, 1950 John von Neumann, 1951, 1952 G. T. Whyburn, 1953, 1954 R. L. Wilder, 1955, 1956 Richard Brauer, 1957, 1958 E. J. McShane, 1959, 1960 Deane Montgomery, 1961, 1962

    60. AMSMAA Joint Archives Committee
    bochner, salomon 18991982. Rice U. NUCMC 93-1072. Bowditch, Nathaniel 1773-1838. Boston Public Library Hamer. Bowser, Edward Albert 1837-1910
    http://www.ams.org/mathweb/History/collections.html
    AMSMAA Joint Archives Committee
    List of Archival Collections
    The names in this alphabetical list are represented by archival collections at the given locations in North America. No attempt is made to indicate where papers or letters by one person may also be located in the collection of another. Such cross references are often given in the collection descriptions in the indicated sources. Some mathematicians have been included for whom there are no known collections of papers. They are here only as reminders of the inevitable incompleteness of the historical record. Still there may be a possibility of filling in such gaps sometime. Corrections and additions to the list are welcomed; please see How to Provide Further Information for the List of Collections . The key to the abbreviations is given at the end. Name Birth and Death Dates of Person or Range of Collection for Institutions Location (See abbreviations at end.) Source of Information (See abbreviations at end.)

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter