Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Mathematicians - American Mathematicians
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 103    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

         American Mathematicians:     more books (100)
  1. Levi Ben Gerson's Prognostication for the Conjunction of 1345 (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society) by Bernard R. Goldstein, David Pingree, 1990-11
  2. 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
  3. Satan is a Mathematician: Poems of the Weird, Surreal and Fantastic by Keith Allen Daniels, 1998-10-01
  4. Numerologies.: An article from: American Scholar by Vijay Seshadri, 2004-09-22
  5. Persuasion for a Mathematician by Joanne Page, 2003-01
  6. 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
  7. Mathematics forty years after Sputnik.: An article from: American Scholar by Solomon W. Golomb, 1998-03-22
  8. Accept No Limitations: A Black Woman Encounters Corporate America by Marjorie L. Kimbrough, 1991-02
  9. Mathematicians in Love by Rudy Rucker, 2008-07-08
  10. Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush, Engineer of the American Century by G. Pascal Zachary, 1999-06-11
  11. Robert Lee Moore, 1882-1974 by Raymond Louis Wilder, 1976
  12. The influence of French mathematicians at the end of the eighteenth century upon the teaching of mathematics in American colleges by Lao Genevra Simons, 1931
  13. [The teaching of mathematics and associated subjects in American colleges] by Frederick Clayton Waite, 1938
  14. Young Vermont mathematician's almanac for the year 1847;: Being third year after bissextile or leap year. Containing, besides the usual variety of matter, a sketch of the life of its author by Truman Henry Safford, 1846

41. AMATYC Homepage
The american Mathematical Association of TwoYear Colleges.
http://www.amatyc.org/

The American Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges
About AMATYC
Contact Information
Conferences Workshops
Committees ... Join AMATYC AMATYC Bulletin Board
  • What year did you join AMATYC? Please take a few seconds to complete the AMATYC survey
  • Enumclaw Summer Institute - Application Deadline Extended to June 1. See the flyer (pdf file) for more information about the institute.
  • Call for the 2005 Teaching Excellence Award Nominations.
  • Thinking about the summer? Join the AMATYC Summer Institutes. Visit www.amatyc.org/SumInst/SI.html
  • Advertising opportunities with AMATYC
  • Exhibiting and Commercial Presenting Opportunities at the 30th AMATYC Annual Conference in Orlando.
  • Call for the 2005-2007 Executive Board Nominations
  • Do you know AMATYC News, AMATYC Review and Electronic Proceedings? Visit Publications
  • For mathematics position announcements from AMATYC institutional members, please visit
  • 42. The Faces Of Science African Americans In The Sciences
    The Faces of Science African americans in the Sciences A wonderful collection of biographies and information on the many contributions of African american scientists are available at this site.
    http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.princeton.edu/~mcbrown/display/faces

    43. About "The American Mathematical Monthly (MAA Online)"
    The american Mathematical Monthly (MAA Online).
    http://mathforum.org/library/view/10737.html
    The American Mathematical Monthly (MAA Online)
    Library Home
    Full Table of Contents Suggest a Link Library Help
    Visit this site: http://www.maa.org/pubs/monthly.html Author: Roger A. Horn, Ed., Mathematical Association of America (MAA) Description: The Monthly publishes articles, notes, and other features about mathematics and the profession. Its readers include professional mathematicians as well as students of mathematics at all collegiate levels. Authors are invited to submit articles and notes that bring interesting mathematical ideas to a wide audience. Summaries of articles from January of 1997 to the present are at this site; an archive of 1997 issues is available, and the full text of volumes 1-100 can be searched and browsed at JSTOR. Levels: College Languages: English Resource Types: Journals Math Topics: Algebra Calculus (Single Variable) Calculus (Multivariable) Differential Equations ... Contact Us
    http://mathforum.org/

    44. Mathematicians Born In USA
    mathematicians born in USA. Click on the name below to go to the biography. HistoryTopics Index, Famous curves index. mathematicians of the day, Timelines.
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/BirthplaceMaps/Countries/USA.html

    45. Mathematicians, Meterologists, Microbiologists -- The Faces Of Science: African
    mathematicians African Americans in the Sciences. Benjamin Banneker. Sister Mary Sylvester Deconge. Annie Easley. Evelyn Boyd Collins Granville. Katherine G. Johnson. J. Ernest Wilkins, Jr. Scott Warner Williams. Scientists Identified Not Yet Profiled
    http://www.princeton.edu/~mcbrown/display/profession/m2.html
    Mathematicians: African Americans in the Sciences
    Index by Profession Biochemists Biologists Chemists Engineers ... Zoologists
    Profiled Scientists Scientists Identified Not Yet Profiled
    • Andrew Norwood Aheart
    • Prince Winston Armstrong
    • Elayne Arrington-Idowu
    • Joseph Battle
    • John Henry Bennett
    • Albert Turner Bharucha-Reid
    • David Harold Blackwell
    • Simmie Samuel Blakney
    • Lillian Katie Bradley
    • Warren Hill Brothers
    • Marjorie Lee Brown
    • George Hench Butcher, Jr.
    • Charles W. Cansler
    • Edward Major Carroll
    • Jeremiah Certaine
    • Llayron L. Clarkson
    • William Waldron Shiefflin Claytor
    • Lois Louise Cooper
    • Elbert Frank Cox
    • Suzanne Craig
    • Geraldine Claudette Carden
    • Joseph J. Dennis, Jr.
    • James Ashley Donaldson
    • Samuel Horace Dougles
    • James William Drew
    • Henry Madison Eldridge
    • James R. Ellis
    • Wade Ellis
    • Earl Owen Embree
    • John Albert Ewell III
    • Etta Zuber Falconer
    • William Thomas Fletcher
    • Joseph Everett Fuller
    • Thomas Fuller
    • Sadie Catherine Gasaway
    • Fannie Gee
    • Issac T. Gilliam, IV
    • Joella Hardeman Gipson
    • Israel Everett Glover
    • Japheth Hall, Jr.

    46. American Mathematical Society
    The american Mathematical Society. The american Mathematical Society started itsexistence as the New York Mathematical Society which was founded in 1888.
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Societies/AMS.html

    47. The American Mathematical Association Of Two-Year Colleges
    The american Mathematical Association of TwoYear Colleges The american Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges (AMATYC) is committed to heightening the awareness of the vital importance of
    http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.amatyc.org/index.html&y=02598BF8

    48. American Mathematical Society - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    american Mathematical Society. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.The american Mathematical Society (AMS) is dedicated to the
    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:

    49. American Mathematical Society; Proceedings Of The AMS
    american Mathematical Society; Proceedings of the AMS. Longer papers may besubmitted to the Transactions of the american Mathematical Society.
    http://gort.ucsd.edu/newjour/a/msg01739.html
    NewJour Home NewJour: A Search
    [Prev]
    ... [Next]
    American Mathematical Society; Proceedings of the AMS
    Subject: Proceedings of the AMS Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2000 13:19:02 American Mathematical Society; Proceedings of the AMS http://www.ams.org/proc/ NewJour Home NewJour: A Search ... [Next]

    50. Proceedings Of The American Mathematical Society
    Proceedings of the american Mathematical Society. Longer papers may besubmitted to the Transactions of the american Mathematical Society.
    http://gort.ucsd.edu/newjour/p/msg02779.html
    NewJour Home NewJour: P Search
    [Prev]
    ... [Next]
    Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society
    http://www.ams.org/proc/ NewJour Home NewJour: P Search ... [Next]

    51. New Books, Fine Hall Library, Princeton University: March 2004
    QA164.8 .B46 2003. Lando, SK 1955, Lectures on generating functions, Providence,RI american Mathematical Society, c2003. QA164.8 .L3613 2003.
    http://www.princeton.edu/~finelib/mar04bks.html
    Fine Hall Library, Princeton University
    New Books (March 2004) Math Physics , or Other Author Title Imprint Call Number Math Books... Bailey, R. Association schemes : designed experiments, algebra, and combinatorics New York : Cambridge University Press, 2003. Benjamin, Arthur T. Proofs that really count : the art of combinatorial proof [Washington, D.C.] : Mathematical Association of America, c2003. Lando, S. K. 1955- Lectures on generating functions Providence, R.I. : American Mathematical Society, c2003. Kiltinen, John O. Oval track and other permutation problems : and just enough group theory to solve them Washington, D.C. : Mathematical Association of America ; Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2003. Spinrad, Jeremy P. Efficient graph representations Providence, R.I. : American Mathematical Society, c2003. Adem, Alejandro. Cohomology of finite groups Berlin ; New York : Springer, c2004. Tenenbaum, Gerald. Exercices corrigâes de thâeorie analytique et probabiliste des nombres Paris : Sociâetâe Mathâematique de France, c1996. Tenenbaum, Gerald.

    52. Editeur - American Mathematical Society
    Translate this page Editeur american mathematical society AMS AMS, 2624 documents trouvés.Ajouter au panier, Imprimer, Envoyer par mail, Liste détaillée.
    http://bibli.cirm.univ-mrs.fr/Reference.htm&numrec=191915191919790&Range=0017

    53. Editeur - American Mathematical Society
    Translate this page Editeur american mathematical society AMS AMS, 2624 documents trouvés. 2american mathematical society 1987 Salle des périodiques 1er étage.
    http://bibli.cirm.univ-mrs.fr/Reference.htm&numrec=191915191919790&Range=0039

    54. Ethical Guidelines For The Society
    ETHICAL GUIDELINES OF THE american MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY. To assistin its chartered goal, ``..the furtherance of the interests of
    http://courses.cs.vt.edu/~cs3604/lib/WorldCodes/AMS.html
    Ethical Guidelines for the Society
    Council of the AMS 18 March 1995
    Abstract:
    In January 1994, the Council received the report of its Special Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics. The Committee, which consisted of Murray Gerstenhaber, Frank Gilfeather, Elliott Lieb, and Linda Keen (chair), presented ethical guidelines for adoption by the Council. Those draft guidelines were published twice in the Notices, with a request to the membership for responses and suggestions for changes or improvements. These were sent to the committee which considered all suggestions. The committee then re-drafted the guidelines which were then presented to the January 1995 Council. At that meeting, the council voted to adopt these guidelines on behalf of the Council (by a vote that was unanimous save for one abstention). Later, in business by mail and according to the bylaws, the Council approved the Guidelines in the name of the Society by a vote of twenty-five (25) in favor and three (3) opposed.
    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.

    55. Notices Of The American Mathematical Society Review
    Copyright 1993, Notices of the american Mathematical Society. All rights reserved.Notices of the american Mathematical Society, Vol 40, No 2, p. 152, Feb.
    http://www.civilized.com/Reviews/Pinkham.htmld/
    Notices of the American Mathematical Society, Vol 40, No 2, p. 152, Feb. 1993.
    MLAB: Mathematical Modelling Laboratory
    Reviewed by Roger Pinkham* Since the early 1950s I have used computers to assist in the doing of mathematics. With the passage of time I have seen computers and computing simulate mathematics. New contexts have suggested new problems and new avenues of solutions for old problems. By the late 1970s it was clear that computing should provide enhancement not only of the research process but everyday teaching. Riemann's theorem that a conditionally convergent series can be rearranged to converge to any specified sum is a wonderful example (classroom or homework) of what was here-to-fore impossible. Since the series converges, the individual terms tend to zero, but the series of positive terms diverges to infinity; the series of negative terms to minus infinity. If the desired sum is s, take just enough terms from the series of positive terms to add to no less than s, then take just enough negative terms to come to no more than s, repeat. Because the individual terms tend to zero you can get as close to s as desired. To see this on a printout or on a monitor with an overhead screen, or better yet to write the program yourself, is to experience the theorem in a way that one never could by hand, and cements the conceptual argument lastingly in the mind. Why is it that more use is not made of such opportunities in the classroom? I think it is a question of user-machine interfaces. Few indeed are the professional mathematicians willing to learn, say, C++ sufficiently well to confidently provide their students with great computer graphics demonstrations. With all the other burdens, it's just not worth it. Conclusion? The most ingenious piece of software will never be used extensively unless the front end (*user machine interface) is intuitively appealing, adheres religiously to consistent standards, gives genuinely helpful error messages, and anticipates likely mistakes. This means that the most painful time consuming and important part of a piece of potentially useful software is the design and implementation of the front end.

    56. JSTOR: Mathematical Association Of America
    are now available to the The american Mathematical Monthly , The College MathematicsJournal , and Mathematics Magazine volumes included in JSTOR.
    http://www.jstor.org/journals/maa.html
    RESOURCES FOR LIBRARIANS RESOURCES FOR PUBLISHERS PARTICIPATION INFORMATION
    Mathematical Association of America
    Individual subscriptions are now available to the The American Mathematical Monthly The College Mathematics Journal , and Mathematics Magazine volumes included in JSTOR. For information on obtaining access, please contact the publisher at the address below.
    CONTACT INFORMATION:
    Mathematical Association of America
    Official Web Site: http://www.maa.org/ 1529 Eigthteenth Street, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20036
    Phone: (202) 387-5200
    Fax: (202) 265-2384
    Email: maahq@maa.org
    The Mathematical Association of America is the largest professional society that focuses on undergraduate mathematics education. Our members include university, college, and high school teachers; graduate and undergraduate students; pure and applied mathematicians; computer scientists; statisticians; and many others in academia, government, business, and industry. We welcome all who are interested in the mathematical sciences. The mission of the MAA is "to advance the mathematical sciences, especially at the collegiate level." This mission guides our core interests:
    • Education: We support learning in the mathematical sciences by encouraging effective curriculum, teaching, and assessment at all levels.

    57. Cathleen Morawetz
    Sciences. Cathleen has been a trustee for the american Mathematical Society,the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and Princeton University.
    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.

    58. American Mathematical Society Meeting 09/99
    american Mathematical Society meeting (Central United States and CentralCanada section), Oct. 810. September 28, 1999  Contact
    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

    59. Codebreakers
    Details * Publisher american Mathematical Society * Distributor american MathematicalSociety * Publication Year 2003 * ISBN 08218-2889-4 * Paging
    http://hem.spray.se/sempo/Codebrakers.html
    Codebreakers: Arne Beurling and the Swedish Crypto Program during World War II
    Bengt Beckman Not yet published.
    Expected publication date is January 2, 2003
    From Reviews of the Swedish Edition:
    Cryptologia "The book contains a well of information ... including detailed accounts of how several of the breaks were performed ... The Swedish cryptanalytical achievements are top class and therefore, it is only appropriate to put Sweden in the same league as the other cryptographic `superpowers' at the time: Poland, England, and the USA ... The book is well written and at times, reads like a good thriller ... contains new and unpublished information ..."
    Cryptologia Description One of the greatest accomplishments in the history of cryptography occurred in 1940 when a Swedish mathematician broke the German code used for strategic military communications. This story has all the elements of a classic thriller: a desperate wartime situation; a moody and secretive mathematical genius with a talent for cryptography; and a stunning mathematical feat, mysterious to this day. Arne Beurling, the man who inherited Einstein's office at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study, was the figure who played this role at a crucial moment in world history.
    Though the cracking of the code from the Geheimschreiber (G-Schreiber) device is every bit as impressive as the breaking of the Enigma code by the Poles and English, this secret has been kept for over 50 years! Through the eyes of a former head of Sweden's signal intelligence organization, Bengt Beckman, the reader will learn about the events leading up to the breakthrough and make the acquaintance of not only a remarkable mathematician, but also a remarkable human being.

    60. Book List From The Notices Of The American Mathematical Society, February 2004
    Book List from the Notices of the american Mathematical Society. February2004. January February March April May June July
    http://www.kolmogorov.com/booklist.html
    Book List from the Notices of the American Mathematical Society
    February 2004
    January February March April ... December
    David Acheson 1089 and All That - A Journey into Mathematics
    Peter Pesic Abel's Proof: An Essay on the Sources and Meaning of Mathematical Unsolvability
    Miriam Webster After Math
    Thomas A. Garrity All the Mathematics You Missed : But Need to Know for Graduate School
    Robert Kaplan, Ellen Kaplan The Art of the Infinite: The Pleasures of Mathematics Joan Spicci Beyond the Limit: The Dream of Sofya Kovalevskaya
    Girolamo Cardano
    The Book of My Life (De Vita Propria Liber)
    More books by Girolamo Cardano Gerd Gigerenzer Calculated Risks: How to Know When Numbers Deceive You
    Suzanne M. Wilson California Dreaming: Reforming Mathematics Education
    Bengt Beckman Codebreakers: Arne Beurling and Swedish Cryptanalysis During World War II
    John D. Barrow
    The Constants of Nature: From Alpha to Omega - The Numbers That Encode the Deepest Secrets of the Universe More books by John D. Barrow Pierre Colmez and Jean-Pierre Serre (Editors) Correspondance Grothendieck-Serre Joel Best Damned Lies and Statistics: Untangling Numbers from the Media, Politicians, and Activists

    Page 3     41-60 of 103    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

    free hit counter