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         Whyburn Gordon:     more books (23)
  1. Topological Analysis 1ST Edition by Gordon Whyburn, 1958
  2. Topological analysis (Princeton mathematical series) by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1964
  3. Open Mappings on Locally Compact Spaces (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society) by G. T. Whyburn, Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1950-12-31
  4. Dynamic Topology by Gordon Thomas;Duda, Edwin Whyburn, 1979
  5. American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications, Volume XXVIII: ANALYTIC TOPOLOGY. by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1963-01-01
  6. Analytic topology (Colloquium publications) by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1942
  7. Topological aspects of the theory of functions (University of Virginia. Technical note) by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1957
  8. Monotoneity of limit mappings by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1962
  9. Topological analysis (Princeton mathematical series;no.23) by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1958
  10. Topological characterization of the Sierpiʹnski curve by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1958
  11. Uniform convergence for monotone mappings by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1957
  12. On convergence of mappings by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1958
  13. Notes on general topology and mapping theory by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1967
  14. ANALYTIC TOPOLOGY. American Mathematical Society. Colloquium Publications, Vol. by Gordon Thomas Whyburn, 1942-01-01

1. Whyburn
Gordon Thomas Whyburn. Born 7 Jan Gordon Whyburn s parents were ThomasWhyburn and Eugenia Elizabeth Whyburn. His school education
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Whyburn.html
Gordon Thomas Whyburn
Born: 7 Jan 1904 in Lewisville, Texas, USA
Died: 8 Sept 1969 in Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Gordon Whyburn 's parents were Thomas Whyburn and Eugenia Elizabeth Whyburn. His school education was in his home town of Lewisville and then, after graduating from school, he entered the University of Texas. He did not embark on a mathematics course at university, however, for his first love was chemistry and it was this topic which he studied for his first degree and he was awarded his A.B. in Chemistry in 1925. Robert Moore had been appointed as associate professor at the University of Texas in 1920 and it was Moore who taught Whyburn calculus early in his university studies. Moore quickly saw the mathematical potential in Whyburn, and Whyburn was soon attending further mathematics courses given by Moore who encouraged him greatly towards the study of mathematics. Even before he obtained his first degree in chemistry, Whyburn was undertaking research in mathematics with Moore . Of course with Moore having a deep interest in topology , that was the direction that Whyburn took and it was to become the topic of his research throughout his life.

2. Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations
Author, Whyburn, Gordon Thomas, 1904. Title, Analytic topology. Pub info,New York, American Mathematical Society, 1942. LOCATION, CALL , STATUS.
http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/10,33,36/search/aWhybrow, Peter
KEYWORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT Author Whyburn, Gordon Thomas, 1904- Title Analytic topology. Pub info New York, American Mathematical Society, 1942. LOCATION CALL # STATUS Central Non-Fic CHECK SHELVES Call # Descript x, 278 p. 26 cm. Series American Mathematical Society. Colloquium publications, v. 28 Bibliog. Bibliography: p. 266-274. Subject Topology.

3. Tree
Students of whyburn, gordon Thomas. Aitchison, Barbara (0/0
http://www.discovery.utexas.edu/rlm/people/2151.html
Students of Whyburn, Gordon Thomas
Aitchison, Barbara (0/0)
Johns Hopkins University (1933)
Burton, Leonard P. (0/0)
University of North Carolina(1951)
Clark, C. L. (1/1)

University of Virginia (1944)
Deal, Albert L. III (0/0)
University of North Carolnia(1965)
Dickman, R. F. (0/0)
University of Virginia (1966) Drucker, Betram M. (0/0) University of North Carolina(1952) Duda, Edwin (3/3) University of Virginia (1961) Duke, R. A. (0/0) University of Virginia (1965) Etgen, Garret J. (0/0) University of North Carolina(1964) Floyd, E. E. (0/0) University of Virginia (1948) Fort, M. K. (5/10) University of Virginia (1948) Garcia-Maynez, A. C. (0/0) University of Virginia (1968) Hall, Dick Wick (5/5) University of Virginia (1938) Harry, C. H. (0/0) Johns Hopkins University (1932) Herwitz, Paul S. (0/0) University of North Carolina (1953) Hilt, Sandra Ness (0/0) University of North Carolina(1965) Hinds, Anthony K. (0/0) University of North Carolina(1949) Jollensten, R. W. (0/0) University of Virginia (1956) Kasriel, Robert H. (4/4) University of Virginia (1953) Kelley, John L. (7/7)

4. A Guide To The Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers
Descriptive Summary. Creator, whyburn, gordon Thomas, 1904. Title, gordon Thomaswhyburn Papers. whyburn, gordon Thomas, 1904-. Return to the Table of Contents.
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00199/cah-00199.html
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary Biographical Note Scope and Contents Restrictions ... Literary productions of Gordon T. Whyburn:
A Guide to the Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers
Descriptive Summary Creator Whyburn, Gordon Thomas, 1904- Title Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers Dates: Abstract The Whyburn (Gordon Thomas) Papers consist of 17 off-prints (bound copies of articles published in journals) of Whyburn's contributions to scientific and mathematical journals between 1926 and 1929. Accession No. Extent 1 inch Language English. Repository Center for American History,The University of Texas at Austin
Biographical Note
Gordon Thomas Whyburn (1904-1969) attended the University of Texas at Austin, obtaining Bachelors and Masters Degrees from the Department of Chemistry. He earned his Ph. D. in Mathematics in 1927 and became adjunct professor of mathematics from 1927 to 1929. Whyburn studied in Europe with Hans Hahn, Kazimerz Kuratowski, and Waclaw Sierpinski before being appointed associate professor of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University in 1930. In 1934, he accepted appointment as professor and chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Virginia, where he stayed for the remainder of his career. He researched topology, cyclic elements, the structure of continua, homology theory, and examined different notions of convergents in the space of all subsets of a compact metric space.

5. The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Gordon Whyburn
Select a mirror. NDSU (main) Bielefeld. Ole Miss. AMS. gordon Thomas whyburn. Biography. Ph.D. University of Texas at Austin 1927. Name. School. Year. Descendants. Beatrice Aitchison. The Johns Hopkins University. 1933. Adalberto Cervantes According to our current online database, gordon whyburn has 30 students and 385 descendants
http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/id.phtml?id=293

6. A Guide To The Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers
A Guide to the gordon Thomas whyburn Papers. Descriptive Summary. Creator, whyburn,gordon Thomas, 1904. whyburn, gordon Thomas, 1904-. Administrative Information.
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00199/00199b.html
A Guide to the Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers
Descriptive Summary Creator Whyburn, Gordon Thomas, 1904- Title Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers Dates: Abstract The Whyburn (Gordon Thomas) Papers consist of 17 off-prints (bound copies of articles published in journals) of Whyburn's contributions to scientific and mathematical journals between 1926 and 1929. Accession No. Extent 1 inch Language English. Repository Center for American History,The University of Texas at Austin
Biographical Note
Gordon Thomas Whyburn (1904-1969) attended the University of Texas at Austin, obtaining Bachelors and Masters Degrees from the Department of Chemistry. He earned his Ph. D. in Mathematics in 1927 and became adjunct professor of mathematics from 1927 to 1929. Whyburn studied in Europe with Hans Hahn, Kazimerz Kuratowski, and Waclaw Sierpinski before being appointed associate professor of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University in 1930. In 1934, he accepted appointment as professor and chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Virginia, where he stayed for the remainder of his career. He researched topology, cyclic elements, the structure of continua, homology theory, and examined different notions of convergents in the space of all subsets of a compact metric space.
Scope and Contents
The Whyburn (Gordon Thomas) Papers consist of 17 off-prints (bound copies of articles published in journals) of Whyburn's contributions to scientific and mathematical journals between 1926 and 1929.

7. Untitled
encodinganalog="100" source="lcnaf" whyburn, gordon Thomas, 1904 /persname /origination unittitle encodinganalog="520$a" The whyburn (gordon Thomas) Papers consist of 17
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00199.xml
urn:taro:utexas.cah.00199 A Guide to the Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers Text converted and initial EAD tagging done by Traci JoLeigh Drummond on Finding aid written in English. Tue Jul 22 15:29:11 CDT 2003 urn:taro:utexas.cah.00199 converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.xsl (20030505). Descriptive Summary Whyburn, Gordon Thomas, 1904- Gordon Thomas Whyburn Papers 1 inch Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin The Whyburn (Gordon Thomas) Papers consist of 17 off-prints (bound copies of articles published in journals) of Whyburn's contributions to scientific and mathematical journals between 1926 and 1929. English. Biographical Note Gordon Thomas Whyburn (1904-1969) attended the University of Texas at Austin, obtaining Bachelors and Masters Degrees from the Department of Chemistry. He earned his Ph. D. in Mathematics in 1927 and became adjunct professor of mathematics from 1927 to 1929. Whyburn studied in Europe with Hans Hahn, Kazimerz Kuratowski, and Waclaw Sierpinski before being appointed associate professor of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University in 1930. In 1934, he accepted appointment as professor and chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Virginia, where he stayed for the remainder of his career. He researched topology, cyclic elements, the structure of continua, homology theory, and examined different notions of convergents in the space of all subsets of a compact metric space.

8. Loosely Closed Sets And Partially Continuous Functions.
Loosely closed sets and partially continuous functions. euclid.mmj/1028999717 Citation Michigan Math. J. 14 (1967), no. 2, 193205 whyburn, gordon T. gordon T. whyburn
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://ProjectEuclid.org/getRecord?id=euclid.mm

9. Whyburn Portrait
gordon whyburn. JOC/EFR September 2003 The URL of this page is © Copyright information.http//wwwhistory.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/PictDisplay/whyburn.html.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/PictDisplay/Whyburn.html
Gordon Whyburn
JOC/EFR September 2003 The URL of this page is:
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/PictDisplay/Whyburn.html

10. Whyburn
Biography of gordon whyburn (19041969) gordon Thomas whyburn. Born 7 Jan 1904 in Lewisville, Texas, USA gordon whyburn's parents were Thomas whyburn and Eugenia Elizabeth whyburn
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Whyburn.html
Gordon Thomas Whyburn
Born: 7 Jan 1904 in Lewisville, Texas, USA
Died: 8 Sept 1969 in Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Gordon Whyburn 's parents were Thomas Whyburn and Eugenia Elizabeth Whyburn. His school education was in his home town of Lewisville and then, after graduating from school, he entered the University of Texas. He did not embark on a mathematics course at university, however, for his first love was chemistry and it was this topic which he studied for his first degree and he was awarded his A.B. in Chemistry in 1925. Robert Moore had been appointed as associate professor at the University of Texas in 1920 and it was Moore who taught Whyburn calculus early in his university studies. Moore quickly saw the mathematical potential in Whyburn, and Whyburn was soon attending further mathematics courses given by Moore who encouraged him greatly towards the study of mathematics. Even before he obtained his first degree in chemistry, Whyburn was undertaking research in mathematics with Moore . Of course with Moore having a deep interest in topology , that was the direction that Whyburn took and it was to become the topic of his research throughout his life.

11. AIM Reprint Library:
Listing for whyburn, gordon T. Viewing Page 110 11-16 NEXT . whyburn,gordon T. 2. Local separating points of continua. whyburn, gordon T.
http://www.aimath.org/library/library.cgi?database=reprints;mode=display;BrowseT

12. AIM Reprint Library:
Translate this page Whitney, A. Whitney, AM Whitney, Anne Whitney, EL Whitney, H. Whitney, Hassler Whittle,G. Whittle, Geoff whyburn, GT whyburn, GT whyburn, gordon T. Widder, DV
http://www.aimath.org/library/library.cgi?database=reprints;mode=display;BrowseL

13. Alphabetical Listing
Bereiter , Sister. Berg, gordon Owen. Berge, John. Bergman, John G Whittaker, James. whyburn, gordon Thomas. whyburn, Lucille E. whyburn, William Marvin
http://www.discovery.utexas.edu/rlm/people/alphlist.html
Alphabetical Listing
*The following links will bring you to their teacher's page
Abraham, Clavi E.

Abramson, Paul

Addis, D. F.

Addis, David
...
Blair, Robert L.

Blake, William K.
Blakemore, Carroll F

Block, Louis

Bloomberg, Edward M.
Boals, Alfred ... Boswell, R. D. Bownds, John M. Boyce, William Martin Boyd, William S. Boyer, Jean Marie Bradley, John S. ... Burton, Leonard P. Burton, Thomas E. Bushnell, Donald D. Butcher, George Butcher, Kay E. Bynum, William Lee ... Carrano, Frank M., Jr. Carroll, Michael P. Carruth, J. H. Cash, Burt Casler, Burtis Griffin Certain, M. ... Ellis, H. G. Ellison, William T. Embry, Mary Rodriguez Engvall, John Eslinger, Robert Etgen, Garret ... Gillman, David Gillotte, Michael J. Girolo, Jack E. Glaser, Leslie Goblirsch, Robert Golightly, George ... Hancasky, David M. Hanson, Carl E. Haque, Mohammed Rashidul Hargrove, E. E. Harrell, C. E. Harris, J. K. ... Leininger, C. W. Leone, Paulo C. Leslie, Robert Arthur Levin, Joseph H. Lewis, Jesse C. Lewis, Judith Ann ... Lindahl, Robert J. Ling, Williams E. Lininger, Lloyd L. Lister, Frederick M. Livingston, Arthur Eugene Lobb, Barry Lee ... Martin, Joseph M. Martin, Nathan C. Marx, Morris Leon

14. National Academy Of Sciences - Deceased Member
whyburn, gordon T. Date of Birth January 7, 1904. Electedto NAS 1951. Date of Death September 8, 1969.
http://www4.nationalacademies.org/nas/nasdece.nsf/(urllinks)/NAS-58MURT?opendocu

15. National Academy Of Sciences
Whitney, Hassler. Whitney, Willis R. Whittaker, Robert H. whyburn, gordon T. Wick,GianCarlo. Wieland, Heinrich. Wiersma, CAG. Wiesner, Jerome B. Wiggers, Carl J.
http://www4.nationalacademies.org/nas/nasdece.nsf/urllinks/$$AlphaListW?OpenDocu

16. A Guide To The R. L. Moore Papers, 1875, 1891-1975
Veblen, Oswald, 18801960. whyburn, gordon Thomas, 1904- Wall, Hubert Stanley, 1944-1969 and undated. whyburn, gordon Thomas, Ph.D
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00304/cah-00304.html
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Descriptive Summary Biographical Note Scope and Contents Organization ... IV: Artifacts:
A Guide to the R. L. Moore Papers, 1875, 1891-1975
Descriptive Summary Creator: Moore, R. L. (Robert Lee), 1882- Title: R. L. Moore Papers, Dates: Abstract: R. L. Moore (1882-1974), a prominent mathematician, was a professor of mathematics at The University of Texas at Austin for almost fifty years. The R. L. Moore Papers, 1875-1975, consist of correspondence, research notebooks, drafts, teaching material, mathematical notes, printed material, photographs and other material documenting the life and career of Moore. Accession Numbers: Extent: 27 ft., plus books and journals Laguage: Materials are written in English. Repository: Archives of American Mathematics, Center for American History,The University of Texas at Austin
Biographical Note
Robert Lee Moore (1882-1974), a prominent mathematician, was a professor of mathematics at The University of Texas at Austin for almost fifty years. He is well known for his work in point-set topology, but is most remembered for his work as an educator. During his long career, Moore supervised over fifty doctoral students, including three members of the National Academy of Sciences, three presidents of the American Mathematical Society and four presidents of the Mathematical Association of America. Moore was born November 14, 1882, in Dallas, Texas, the fifth child of Charles Jonathan and Louisa Ann Moore. He developed an interest in mathematics early in life, teaching himself out of a calculus textbook before entering The University of Texas in 1898 at the age of sixteen. There he studied under George Bruce Halsted, simultaneously earning a B.S. and M.A. in 1901. After graduating, Moore spent a year as a Fellow in mathematics at UT and taught an analytic geometry course. During his fellowship, Moore discovered a redundancy in Hilbert's formulation of a set of axioms for geometry; this redundancy, unbeknownst to Moore, had already been published earlier that year by E. H. Moore (no relation) of the University of Chicago. Nonetheless, R. L. Moore's version of the redundancy was "elegant" and an important early achievement in his career.

17. The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Gordon Whyburn
IMPA. gordon Thomas whyburn Biography 14. According to our current onlinedatabase, gordon whyburn has 30 students and 385 descendants.
http://www.genealogy.ams.org/html/id.phtml?id=293

18. Hereford College - Whyburn House
whyburn House. whyburn House. gordon T. whyburn (1904 1969) came in 1934 as chair of mathematics and subsequently became alumni professor. In 1966, he became the first member of the University's Center for Advanced Studies.
http://hereford.virginia.edu/buildings/whyburn.html
Whyburn House
Whyburn House Gordon T. Whyburn (1904 - 1969) came in 1934 as chair of mathematics and subsequently became alumni professor. In 1966, he became the first member of the University's Center for Advanced Studies. A mathematician, he was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, president of the American Mathematical Society, and vice president and chair of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He received the Thomas Jefferson Award in 1968.
Whyburn Events
  • Attention Whyburn residents! Interested in running for EBC? We have ONE spot open- elections will be held Monday night, Jan. 28th. To become a candidate, please let one of your house reps know by Saturday. They are: Hina Ayub hina@virginia.edu Jason Perkins jtp4t@virginia.edu Josh Fix joshfix@virginia.edu
    Email for more Information
    hina@virginia.edu@virginia.ed

19. The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Index Of WH
1927. whyburn, Clifton, The University of North Carolina at ChapelHill, 1964. whyburn, gordon, University of Texas at Austin, 1927. Whyte
http://www.genealogy.ams.org/html/letter.phtml?letter=WH

20. ISBN.pl - Analytic
whyburn, gordon Thomas Analytic Topology. whyburn, gordon Thomas. whyburn, gordonThom - Analytic Topology HARDCOVER ISBN 1124010513 Mathematics-Topology.
http://www.isbn.pl/2785-Analytic.html
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