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         German Mathematicians:     more detail
  1. Proceedings of the International Congress of MathematiciansMoscow, 1966.[Text varies- Russian, English, French & German] by I G Petrovsky, 1968
  2. Emil J. Gumbel: Weimar German Pacifist and Professor (Studies in Central European Histories) (Studies in Central European Histories) by Arthur D. Brenner, 2002-02-01
  3. Recent Developments In Stochastic Analysis And Related Topics: Beijing, China 29 August - 3 September 2002 by Sino-german Conference on Stochastic Ana, Sergio Albeverio, et all 2005-01
  4. Sad Strains of a Gay Waltz: A Novel by Irene Dische, 1997-07
  5. Measuring the World: A Novel (Unabridged) by Daniel Kehlmann,
  6. The Company of Strangers by Robert Wilson, 2001-10-19

21. Dan Barbilian
In October 1941 he attended the Congress of the german mathematiciansheld in Jena. Suffering an accident at the leg while in Jena
http://www.mathesis.ro/capital/en/htm/pers/personalitati/barbilian.htm
english romana
Dan Barbilian
After 1930, however, a revival flamed the soul of Dan Barbilian, because after this year he devoted exclusively to mathematics, becoming one of the promoters of the axiomatic in our country and asserting - as will be seen - by his creations of geometry and algebra. Barbilian started his activity of corespondent to the "Mathematical Gazette" in 1910, as pupil in the Vth grade, science curricula, solving two trigonometry problems, discipline which was only studied in the VIth. grade. As pupil in the Vith grade, in the spring holiday of April 1912, he attended the competition organised by the "Mathematical Gazette" and he was the best. Gheorghe Titeica wrote then about him: "With a very good written paper at algebra, with another excellent one at elementary trigonometry, where he used an admirable ingenious method, with his sure and precise answers which showed a properly managed thinking and extensive knowledge, with these high traits, Dl. Barbilian has won all of a sudden, the top position. Let it be a good sign for the next competitions". In 1914, when Barbilian passed his baccalaureate examination at "Mihai Viteazul" high school, Gh. Titeica, as president of the commission remarked again Barbilian, seeing in him a hope for a future mathematician .

22. JOHANN FRIEDRICH PFAFF
Pfaffs researches bore chiefly on the theory of series, to which he applied the methodsof the socalled combinatorial school of german mathematicians, and on
http://10.1911encyclopedia.org/P/PF/PFAFF_JOHANN_FRIEDRICH.htm
JOHANN FRIEDRICH PFAFF
PFAFF, JOHANN FRIEDRICH His brother, JOHANN WILHELM ANDREAS PFAFF (I7741835), was professor of pure and applied mathematics successively at Dorpat, Nurcmberg, Wurzburg and Erlangen. Another brother, CHRISTIAN HEINRIcH PFAFF (1773-1852), graduated in medicine at Stuttgart in 1793, and from 1801 till his death was professor of medicine, physics and chemistry at the university of Kid. PEZENAS PFALZBURG

23. Harald Bohr Correspondence
He did that because he was anxious that the Germans should seize on his correspondenceand misuse its information about german mathematicians, whom Bohr had
http://www.math.ku.dk/ths/bohr_h/corresp.htm
Harald Bohr correspondence
The destiny of Harald Bohr's correspondence
The few letters in the Harald Bohr Papers in Copenhagen is a very tiny fraction of the large amount of letters to and from Bohr which once existed. According to Bohr's son, Ole Bohr, Bohr kept the letters he received and organized them well until April 1940 where he destroyed most of them shortly after the German invasion of Denmark. He did that because he was anxious that the Germans should seize on his correspondence and misuse its information about German mathematicians, whom Bohr had helped to leave Germany. According to Asger Aaboe (Yale University), who has had contact with the surviving relatives, the left over of Bohr's collection of correspondence (among other things his correspondence with Godfrey H. Hardy) was kept by Bohr's wife Ulla Bohr for many years, but destroyed by her in the 1970s. There is probably no more correspondence kept by the surviving relatives, at least not any scientific correspondence, and the only part of Bohr's own collection of correspondence which has survived are the letters in the Harald Bohr Papers and some family correspondence (mainly letters to and from his brother Niels) kept in the Family correspondence at the Niels Bohr Archive Hence, the major part of the correspondence listed below is located in other collections. The correspondents are divided in two groups. The first group, which is given alphabetical in a table with links to more details, consists of correspondents where more than one letter to or from Bohr has been conserved. The second group consists of all the minor correspondents where only one letter to or from Bohr has been conserved.

24. Math-Net -- Internet Information Services For Mathematicians
People, PERSONA MATHEMATICA Helps you find personal homepages or addresses ofgerman mathematicians, Info, Project Information Information about MathNet, Math
http://physnet.physik.uni-oldenburg.de/~hilf/vortraege/goebel60/mathnet.html
Math-Net
Internet Information
Services
for Mathematicians
Math-Net Charter

Sigma
S
earchable i ndex for G erman ma thematical resources; Fulltext, keyword and metadata based search; hierarchical MSC index Navigator
find out more about MathNet members - by name categories or regions MPRESS
Searchable index
of preprints from Austria, France, Germany, LANL and more; hierarchical MSC index MathNet Links
Visit our collection of mathematical resources and related links P ERSONA M ATHEMATICA
Helps you find personal homepages or addresses of German mathematicians Project Information Information about MathNet, Math-Net Newsletter and Archive Netlib Search Searchable Index of the Netlib , a repository of mathematical software, data and documents Contact address If you need further information or help with this server Last Update: Jan 2001 Responsible W. Sperber W. Dalitz

25. Eames Office Projects :: Mathematica Timeline (German)
History, Produced for the German branch of IBM Corporation. The title ofthe exhibition was changed and two german mathematicians were added.
http://www.eamesoffice.com/project.php?id=239&start=M

26. TU Berlin - Medieninformation No. 19 (English) - 19. January 1998
For german mathematicians, the International Congress of Mathematicians1998 is an event of major importance. Over the last fifty
http://www.tu-berlin.de/presse/pi/1998/pi19e.htm
Medieninformation No. 19 (English) - 19. January 1998 [TU Berlin] [Pressestelle] [Medieninformationen] Advanced announcement
The "International Congress of Mathematicians", the largest and most important mathematical congress worldwide, is being held from 18th to 27th August 1998 in Berlin.
  • Some 4000 participants are expected.
  • It is being held in Germany for the first time in 94 years.
  • During the Congress the Fields Medal will be awarded, the "Nobel Prize" for mathematicians.
  • An extensive fringe programme will include an exhibition "Hands-on Mathematics" with a "VideoMath" festival and a number of scientific events for non-experts.
To the members of the press, radio and television: In the March we will be drawing up a list of the most important (and accessible) mathematical topics from the plenary lecture. Can you please name a contact in your organisation, so that we can pass this information on to them directly? You can ring the PR Office of the TU Berlin (Dr. Kristina Zerges or Janny Glaesmer) under Tel. +49 30 314-22919 or 23922, send a fax to +49 30 314-23909, or send e-mail to: pressestelle@tu-berlin.de

27. Springer-Verlag - Company
The journals were edited by Felix Klein, David Hilbert, Albert Einsteinand Otto Blumenthal, the leading german mathematicians of their time.
http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/frontpage/0,10735,5-104-2-69810-0,00.html
Please enable Javascript in your browser to browse this website. Home Company
Select a discipline Biomedical Sciences Chemistry Computer Science Engineering Environmental Sciences Geosciences Law Life Sciences Materials Mathematics Medicine Statistics preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900120-0,00.gif'); preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900180-0,00.gif'); preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900170-0,00.gif'); preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900190-0,00.gif'); preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900200-0,00.gif'); preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900160-0,00.gif');
All Author/Editor Title ISBN/ISSN Series
preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900050-0,00.gif'); preloadImage('/sgw/cda/pageitems/designobject/cda_displaydesignobject/0,10885,5-0-17-900070-0,00.gif'); Springer-Verlag Worldwide Company Profile
History of Springer-Verlag
Steps in the History of a Company
Julius Springer opened a bookshop at an address on Breite Strasse in Berlin on his 25th birthday. Shortly afterwards, he began setting up a publishing company. He published political and philosophical works, which very soon brought him into conflict with the censors.

28. Curriculum Vitae
of Math., graduate studies. Professional Societies. Member of the german mathematiciansAssociation (DMV). Member of the American Mathematical Society (AMS).
http://math.la.asu.edu/~thieme/VITA.html
CURRICULUM VITAE Horst R. Thieme Department of Mathematics
Arizona State University
Tempe, AZ 85287-1804
Areas of research Analysis and Applied Analysis: Differential Equations (ordinary, partial, functional) Integral, Evolution and Operator Equations (linear and nonlinear) Mathematical Biology: Population Dynamics
Education Diploma (MS) in mathematics at the University of Muenster, Germany 4-28-76 doctorate in natural sciences at the University of Muenster, Germany Doctorate in natural sciences at the University of Muenster, Germany Habilitation at the University of Heidelberg, Germany Venia legendi at the University of Heidelberg, Germany Positions held 12-1-75 to 7-31-76 Research assistant at the University of Muenster, Germany 8-1-76 to 7-31-79 Postdoctoral fellow at the University of Muenster, Germany 8-1-79 to 7-31-84 Research fellow at the University of Heidelberg (Germany), research center 'Stochastic Mathematical Models in the Natural Sciences' July 83 to April 91 Privatdozent at the Department of Mathematics, University of Heidelberg

29. A European Mathematical Database
French and german mathematicians are also participating in developing an electronicversion of ``Jahrbuch ueber der Fortschritte die Mathematik from 18681940
http://www.emis.de/etc/coates.html
A European Mathematical Database J.H. Coates Chairman Database Committee European Mathematical Society Europe has been the cradle of mathematical research and publication over the last four hundred years. However, Europe's historical role in both publication and research is being threatened on several fronts. In particular, new electronic technology is currently bringing about a profound revolution in the communication and publication of mathematical research. While it is still impossible to foresee at present the full ramifications of this electronic revolution, it is already clear that there is now both the need and the technology to create a comprehensive database of all mathematical publications, which is centred in Europe and owned by the European mathematical community via the European Mathematical Society. Such a European database would be an invaluable research tool for future generations of mathematicians around the world. In addition, it would provide both competition and different traditions to databases emanating from North American sources. The present article sets out both the background and plans for achieving this goal, via an evolution of Zentralblatt f"ur Mathematik und ihre Grenzgebiete. Why action is needed now. Firstly, the current state of technology now makes it feasible to build comprehensive electronic databases, with efficient accessing procedures. In parallel, there is the fact that many journals are now published with an electronic version, and consequently it is much easier to transfer data about the contents of these journals to a central database. It should also be stressed that the vital commercial interests of both private companies and mathematical societies need in no way be compromised by transferring limited information about the contents of their journals (e.g. tables of contents and summaries of articles) to a central database at the time of publication. It may even be possible to eventually persuade many publishers to provide the database with complete copies of their journals several years after their initial publication. Secondly, it is self evident that the ownership of all major databases in mathematics should be clearly vested in the community of mathematicians which produced much of the mathematics in them in the first place. North American mathematicians already in effect own such a database via the ownership of Mathematical Reviews by the American Mathematical Society. Until such time as the European Mathematical Society succeeds in establishing a comprehensive database of its own, there is a danger of the vacuum in Europe being filled by the American Mathematical Society dominating databases on the world scene. This scenario would ultimately lead to a downgrading of Europe's place in international mathematical research. Finally, all mathematicians are aware of the explosive growth in the numbers of both journals and less formal forms of publications which has come with the electronic revolution. In many ways, the cosy traditional world which existed up until the early 1980's, in which a mathematician could keep track of most publications in his field by scanning the contents of a fairly stable list of journals, many of them of long pedigree, on the shelves of his or her university library, is now being profoundly modified. If future generations are to maintain the great mathematical practice of citing in research papers all closely related earlier literature, it seems that this will only be feasible by the systematic use of a comprehensive database. Short term plans. The European mathematical community is fortunate in already possessing the beginnings of an excellent database. Zentralblatt f"ur Mathematik exists both as a conventional printed reviewing journal, and as the electronic database MATH covering all Zentralblatt back issues until 1931, which is available either on CD-ROM or via WWW-access. Zentralblatt is currently run by the Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, and published by FIZ Karlsruhe, and Springer Verlag. These bodies have invited the European Mathematical Society to collaborate with them to ensure the future evolution of Zentralblatt into a database second to none in the world, which will become an everyday tool for the working mathematician. The European Mathematical Society has willingly accepted this invitation, with the firm understanding that the ownership of this database should in the long term be placed in the hands of the mathematical community. As a first step in the development of this database, the European Mathematical Society has already taken several concrete steps to encourage a more widespread electronic use of Zentralblatt as part of its electronic information service EMIS. Indeed, EMIS now provides a service by which any user, irrespective of whether or not he or she is a subscriber to MATH, or a member of the European Mathematical Society, can carry out limited searches in MATH. Secondly, the Society has just launched a new facility on EMIS called CAP-EMS (Current Awareness of Mathematical Publications). In this new service, publishers will automatically provide the basic data needed by Zentralblatt from the electronic files used for the publication of their journals. This data will consist of tables of contents, together with abstracts when available (or in some cases the first page of each article). It will be freely available for all to consult in EMIS for one year from its date of deposit. At the same time, the data sent to CAP-EMS will be stored permanently in MATH, and will be subject to the usual editorial and review procedures of Zentralblatt. It is hoped to persuade the vast majority of journals published in Europe, and many from elsewhere, to participate in the CAP-EMS scheme. The ownership of the data submitted to CAP-EMS will already be vested in the European Mathematical Society. It should also be stressed that a number of European initiatives are already under way with the aim of exploiting new technology to develop mathematical publication and documentation. The European Mathematical Society has launched its ``Electronic Library of Mathematics'' in EMIS. It will soon contain 30 journals plus conference proceedings, and is freely accessible to any user from 30 mirror servers around the world. The MathDocCell in Grenoble, which is a joint partnership between the University Joseph Fourier, the CNRS and the French Ministry of Education, has made important contributions to the development of software for making efficient searches in the database MATH of Zentralblatt. More generally, the MathDocCell provides an excellent model for a much broader European involvement in Zentralblatt. French and German mathematicians are also participating in developing an electronic version of ``Jahrbuch ueber der Fortschritte die Mathematik'' from 1868-1940. Longer term plans. It is self evident that the long term success of a major database depends on three key ingredients. Firstly, the contents must be very comprehensive, covering nearly all current publications and as large a part as possible of past mathematical literature. Secondly, it must be widely and frequently used by most working mathematicians, who perceive it as a tool as important as the traditional university library (indeed, one might hope with the development of technology that the full contents of most older journals would become available in the database). Thirdly, it must have a sound financial basis, with subscriptions prices being set at a level just sufficient to meet the true costs of running the database and to provide the financial investment needed for its long term development. The European Mathematical Society plans to take action to determine what facilities and services most mathematicians would like in a database of the future. Key questions here include whether or not such a database should be purely electronic, what status a publication should have to be included in the database, and how much effort should be expended in seeking reviewers for articles listed in the database. At the same time, it will do all in its power to promote the use of Zentralblatt by the mathematical community, and to persuade publishers to provide free data for Zentralblatt. In this way, it hopes to come up with a series of concrete proposals about how it might be best for Zentralblatt to evolve over the next five years. Because of the rapid evolution of electronic technology, there will also be a long term need for regular evaluations of the database by the Society. Once the longer term plans of operation for Zentralblatt as a database have been agreed by all relevant parties, The European Mathematical Society will seek the support of the national mathematical societies to appoint a database officer and to establish a database node in each European country. Any costs attached to running these nodes would eventually have to be met from subscriptions to the database. The role of the node would be to generally oversee the automatic collection of material for the database from journals published in that country. The node would equally oversee the operation and access to the database by mathematicians working in that country. An excellent model for such a node is provided by the MathDocCell in Grenoble. Its existence is a first concrete step towards the development of Zentralblatt on a Europe wide basis. The issue of funding the database both in the short term and in the long term remains a difficult one, which must at all costs be solved for the future health of European mathematical research. The European Mathematical Society does not have the financial resources to make a direct financial contribution towards the running of the database, and it recognizes fully that the same is true for the national mathematical societies. It believes that a major part of the funding required to run the database will always have to come from subscriptions. It also believes that the mathematical community will indeed be willing to pay a fair subscription price for a database which genuinely meets its needs. However, the Society feels it can make important contributions to the problems of funding. Specifically, it will do all in its power to persuade the European Union to provide significant financial support to establish the database as an essential large facility for mathematical research in Europe. It will also work with the Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, FIZ Karlsruhe, and Springer Verlag to make transparent and public the basic cost of running the database and will then advise these bodies on what it feels are fair subscription levels.

30. Member And Associate Member Societies Of The EMS
Germany Deutsche MathematikerVereinigung (Union of german mathematicians),Address. Deutsche Mathematiker-Vereinigung (Union of german mathematicians).
http://www.emis.de/member-societies.html
Member Societies and
Institutional Members of the
Member Societies
International member societies
ECMI European Consortium for Mathematics in Industry Address ESMTB European Society for Mathematical and Theoretical Biology Address GAMM
(International Association of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics) Address
National member societies - listed by country
Austria Austrian Mathematical Society Address Belarus Belarussian Mathematical Society Address Belgium Belgian Mathematical Society Address Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnian Mathematical Society Address Bulgaria Union of Bulgarian Mathematicians Address Croatia Hrvatsko Matematicko Drustvo (Croatian Mathematical Society) Address Czech Republic Union of Czech Mathematicians and Physicists Address Denmark Danish Mathematical Society Address Estonia Estonian Mathematical Society Address Finland Finnish Mathematical Society Address France (Mathematical Society of France) Address Address Georgia Georgian Mathematical Union Address Germany Deutsche Mathematiker-Vereinigung (Union of German Mathematicians) Address Greece Hellenic Mathematical Society Address Hungary Address Iceland (Icelandic Mathematical Society) Address Ireland Irish Mathematical Society Address Israel Israel Mathematical Society Address Italy It. Assoc. of Math. Appl. to Economic and Social Sciences

31. Meeting (2003): AHA Session 104: German/Swiss And American Interaction In Higher
American Mathematicians in Germany, german mathematicians in the US Interactionsin Higher Education and Science in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
http://www.historians.org/annual/2003/AHA104.HTM
American Historical Association Annual Meeting Sessions
104. German/Swiss and American Interaction in Higher Education in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Palmer House, Private Dining Room 18 Joint session with the Conference Group for Central European History Chair: Konrad H. Jarausch, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Papers: The Development of the PhD Program on the German Model in the United States from 1862 and How PhD Training Evolved to Influence German Programs in the Twentieth Century
Anne J. MacLachlan, University of California at Berkeley American Mathematicians in Germany, German Mathematicians in the U.S.: Interactions in Higher Education and Science in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Annette Vogt, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science The Benefits of Foreign Study: American Women in Swiss Universities before 1914
Natalia Tikonov, University of Geneva Etikettenschwindel: The Invention of Tradition of Newly Established Research Institutions in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries in Germany and the United States
Peter Walther, Humboldt University

32. Trial Solution - Dates
September 16th to 22nd, 2001, Meeting of the Information and Communication groupof the german mathematicians Association, Vienna, at the joint annual
http://www.trial-solution.de/dates.htm
Dates
upcoming past
Upcoming events
Past events

33. Regular Columns: EEVL Articles: The Secondary Homepages In Mathematics Initiativ
France and Germany, a collection of links to mathematical web resources, PersonaMathematica which allows the user to find german mathematicians, and a
http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue28/eevl2/
EEVL Articles:
The Secondary Homepages in Mathematics Initiative
Greig Fratus , MathGate Manager, provides information about the Secondary Homepages in Mathematics initiative. An initiative of Math-Net [ ], the Secondary Homepage is a template that aims to sort the types of information usually found on departmental websites in mathematics into standardised sections and labels. By offering a user-friendly navigation and search, the Secondary Homepage overcomes the problem of significantly differing departmental homepages. As implied by the name, the Secondary Homepage is not meant to replace the department's homepage but rather to offer users another way of accessing information that is available on the department's website. MathGate [ ] is attempting to coordinate the UK version of this. Math-Net is an Internet Information Service for mathematicians, and the Secondary Homepage is only part of what they do. They also offer a searchable index for German mathematical resources (SIGMA), a searchable index of preprints from several countries including Austria, France and Germany, a collection of links to mathematical web resources, Persona Mathematica which allows the user to find German mathematicians, and a software search. The Math-Net charter has been endorsed by the International Mathematical Union's Committee for Electronic Information and Communication [

34. Mathematics At The Brno German Technical University
Two famous german mathematicians worked in Brno before World War I. From 1905 to1912 Georg Hamel (18771954) worked in Brno at the German Technical University
http://www.math.muni.cz/~sisma/English/bautzen.html
Mathematics at the Brno German Technical University
Introduction
This lecture is devoted to education of mathematics at the school which was the first technical school in Brno. The history of the German Technical University is the history of technical educational institution until 1945. In 1849 the school started as a Technical College, and during 1849-1873 it was transformed into Technical University of the second half of 19th century. The students of the school came to Brno from many parts of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and later from many other countries. The aim of this lecture is to describe the staff at the Departments of Mathematics. There were many renowned mathematicians teaching at this school, especially up to 1918. These, in most cases young, mathematicians became professors of important universities in Austria and Germany. Some of them are e.g. Emanuel Czuber, Ernst Fischer, Johann Radon, Georg Hamel, Richard Mises, and Heinrich Tietze. Some well-known Czech, German, and Austrian mathematicians also tried to become professors at the German Technical University in Brno: for example, Matyas Lerch, Hans Hahn, Wilhelm Blaschke and Emil Artin. The hundred years' history of this school still remains largely unexplored in the Czech Republic. The already existing works are mostly in German and their main concern is the foundation of the school. From later period, these works mention mainly organizational matters of the school. The most important resources are

35. Tsunami Out Of The Computer Featuring Osher & Fedkiw
german mathematicians also profit from the introducing mathematics into specialeffects. This enthusiasm however is shared only by few german mathematicians.
http://www.math.ucla.edu/newsevents/news/osher_german.html
"Tsunami out of the Computer"
When the catastrophe in the movie should look real, Hollywood calls for mathematicians
English translation from the German article by Vasco A. Schmidt in Die Zeit a major German weekly newspaper published in Hamburg, Germany
A new romance is evolving in the movie town of Hollywood. It resembles the old tale of Beauty and the Beast. The friendly monster is played by the big movie producers (after all they find themselves in a hot and competitive market). The princess, which they are desiring, is one of the most beautiful and shy sciences: mathematics. The uneven couple is about to recreate the world of illusions of Hollywood: this time digitally. Each manufacturing building in Universal Studios, which is been set on fire in movie style for tourists several times every day, causes nostalgic feelings- just like the hall next door, where optical tricks by Alfred Hitchcock are shown. It is only a question of time, until the flames and exploding tons can be generated in the film by pressing a button. The water which surrounded the Titanic, the mountains of ``Dante's peak", the tornado of ``Twister", but also the sunny sky above the runway in ``Apollo 13" were not shot, but calculated. Cartoons like ``Antz" or ``Das grosse Krabbeln" were completely generated by the computer. Stan Osher, professor of applied mathematics at UCLA, counts half a dozen mathematical disciplines which one has to master, in order to generate realistic pictures on the screen, from fluid mechanics to differential geometry. Osher was one of the first to realize the market for mathematicians in Hollywood. With his own company he wants to sell his ideas for simulation of water. The Titanic-movie had only waves. ``We can also let the water splash" is how he describes his advantage over competitors.

36. Math PUrview - Winter 1999
98 Organizing Committee. All but the first one are german mathematiciansof international reputation. The DMV representatives spoke
http://www.math.purdue.edu/about/newsletter/winter99/article07_golomb.html
WINTER 1999
Abhyankar Receives Honorary Degree

Message from the Head

New Faces in the Department

Visiting Faculty
...
Purdue Profs Participate in Project NExT

Interview with Michael Golomb
Undergraduate News

Math Advisory Council

1998-99 Outstanding TAs

Grad Student inducted into Teaching Academy
... Math Department Home Page Michael Golomb (born 1909) was a student of Adolf Hammerstein and received his doctorate from the University of Berlin in 1933. The picture for this article was taken in 1938 in Zagreb (Yugoslavia), his first place of refuge. In 1939 he emigrated to the United States and turned to applied mathematics. He was one of the first to apply normed spaces in numerical analysis. Exhibition Announcement* Terror and Exile: Berlin mathematicians under the Nazi regime 1933-1945 In 1998 the ICM returns to Germany after an intermission of 94 years. This long interval covers the darkest period in German history. Therefore the German Mathematical Society (DMV) wants to honor the memory of all those who suffered under the Nazi terror. The DMV does this in the form of an exhibition presenting the biographies of 53 mathematicians from Berlin who were victims of the Nazi regime between 1933 and 1945. The fate of this small group illustrates painfully well the personal sufferings and the destruction of scientific and cultural life; it also sheds light on the instruments of suppression and collaboration. Interview with Michael Golomb, Professor Emeritus

37. German Mathematical Society
on binary forms to the meeting of the Society of german Scientists and which hadtaken place between Clebsch and about 20 other mathematicians at Frankfurtam
http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Societies/German.html

38. Math-Net Welcome Page
Preprints, links, directories. Oriented towards german mathematics but in English.
http://www.math-net.de/
International Mathematical Union (IMU) News Last Update: April, 28, 2004 Imprint

39. MacTutor History Of Mathematics Joachim Jungius
Biography of this german scientific thinker, by J.J. O'Connor and E.F. Robertson.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Jungius.html

40. Persona Mathematica (German Mathematical Search Engine)
Keywords (Substring matching), All above fields are connected by OR AND.Further Services offering Directories and Lists of mathematicians.
http://www.mi.uni-koeln.de/Math-Net/persona_mathematica/pages/standard.html
Math-Net
P ERSONA M ATHEMATICA
Find people on more than 100 mathematical Web-Sites in Germany and Austria Name
(Substring matching)
Search in Math-Net metadata Department member lists * DMV database Educational Math list *
Additionally for search in documents with metadata:
Fields of Interest

(Substring matching)
Keywords

(Substring matching)
All above fields are connected by: OR AND Further Services offering Directories and Lists of Mathematicians Math-Net ; last update: 2002-04-23; @contact

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