Andrew S. Toms Curriculum Vitae

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Andrew S. Toms Curriculum Vitae Andrew S. Toms Curriculum Vitae Contact Information Personal Information Department of Mathematics Born March 12, 1975, Montreal, PQ Purdue University Married with two sons 150 N. University St., West Lafayette, IN Canadian and British citizen 47907-2067 US Permanent Resident Telephone: (765) 494-1901 [email protected] Education 1999–2002 Ph.D. University of Toronto 1997–1999 M.Sc. University of Toronto 1993–1997 B.Sc.H. Queen’s University Employment 2010–present Associate Professor, Purdue University 2008–2010 Associate Professor, York University 2006–2008 Assistant Professor, York University 2004–2006 Assistant Professor, University of New Brunswick 2003–2004 NSERC Postdoctoral Fellow, Copenhagen University Honours and Awards 1. AMS Centennial Fellowship 2011-12 2. Gilbert de Beauregard Robinson Award (with Wilhelm Winter)1 3. Israel Halperin Prize2 4. Canada Research Chair Nomination, 2009 (declined) 5. Ontario Early Researcher Award3, 2008–2013 6. NSERC Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2003–2004 7. Daniel B. DeLury Teaching Award, University of Toronto, 2003 8. Israel Halperin Graduate Award, University of Toronto, 2001–2002 9. NSERC Postgraduate Scholarship, 1997–2001 10. Governor General’s Medal4, Queen’s University, 1997 11. Prince of Wales Prize5, Queen’s University, 1997 1Awarded bi-annually for the best paper to have appeared in the Canadian Journal of Mathematics. 2Awarded every five years to the mathematician from the Canadian community within 10 years of his/her Ph.D. deemed to have made the greatest contribution to operator algebras. I am the first recipient in ten years— the committee did not award the prize in 2005. 3Comparable in frequency and about 70% of the value of a NSF CAREER Award in terms of funds to researcher. 4Awarded to the graduate with the highest aggregate GPA. 5Awarded to the graduate deemed by the Chancellor to have the best academic record. 1 2 Research Interests Operator algebras and their classification, K-theory; a particular interest in points of contact between operator algebras and algebraic and differential topology, dynamics, and set theory. Publications: published, in press, and submitted 1. Minimal dynamics and K-theoretic rigidity: Elliott’s Conjecture (with W. Winter) Geometric and Functional Analysis (in press), 13p. 2. The descriptive set theory of C∗-algebra invariants (with I. Farah and A. Tornquist)¨ International Mathematics Research Notices (in press), 27p. 3. C∗-algebras, dynamics, and classification (with T. Giordano, D. Kerr, and N. C. Phillips) Solicited volume for Birkhauser’s CRM Advanced Course series (in press, approx. 200p.) 4. Turbulence, orbit equivalence, and the classification of nuclear C∗-algebras (with I. Farah and A. Tornquist)¨ Journal fur¨ die reine und angewandte Mathematik (in press), 46p. 5. Characterizing classifiable AH algebras Mathematical Reports of the Royal Society of Canada (in press), 4p. 6. The radius of comparison: an algebraic approach (with B. Blackadar, L. Robert, A. Tikuisis, and W. Winter) Transactions of the American Mathematical Society (in press), 18p. 7. K-theoretic rigidity and slow dimension growth Inventiones Mathematicae 183 (2011), 225-244 8. The Cuntz semigroup and the classification of C∗-algebras (with P. Ara, N.P. Brown, D. Guido, F. Lledo, and F. Perera, Lecture notes for Summer School at UIMP, San- tander, Spain, in July 2008) Contemporary Mathematics 534 (2011), vii+168p. 9. Ranks of operators in simple C∗-algebras (with M. Dadarlat) Journal of Functional Analysis 259 (2010), 209-229 10. Minimal dynamics and the classification of C∗-algebras (with W. Winter) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106 (2009), 16942-16943 11. Z-stability and infinite tensor powers of C∗-algebras (with M. Dadarlat) Advances in Mathematics 220 (2009), 341-366 12. A class of simple C∗-algebras with stable rank one (with G. A. Elliott and T. Ho) Journal of Functional Analysis 256 (2009), 307-322 13. Comparison theory and smooth minimal C∗-dynamics Communications in Mathematical Physics 289 (2009), 401-433 3 14. The Elliott conjecture for Villadsen algebras of the first type (with W. Winter) Journal of Functional Analysis 256 (2009), 1311-1340 15. The Jiang-Su algebra does not always embed (with M. Dadarlat, I. Hirshberg, and W. Winter) Mathematical Research Letters 16 (2009), 23-26 16. A direct proof of Z-stability for AH algebras of bounded dimension (with M. Dadarlat and N. C. Phillips) Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 41 (2009), 639-653 17. The Cuntz semigroup, the Elliott conjecture, and dimension functions on C∗-algebras (with N. P. Brown and F. Perera) Journal fur¨ die reine und angewandte Mathematik 621 (2008), 191-211 18. Inductive limits of K-theoretic complexes with torsion coefficients (with S. Eilers) Journal of K-theory 1 (2008), 145-168 19. Z-stable ASH algebras (with W. Winter) Canadian Journal of Mathematics 60 (2008), 703-720 20. Stability in the Cuntz semigroup of a commutative C∗-algebra Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 96 (2008), 1-25 21. Regularity properties in the classification program for separable amenable C∗-algebras (survey, with G. A. Elliott) Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 45 (2008), 229-245 22. On the classification problem for nuclear C∗-algebras Annals of Mathematics 167 (2008), 1059-1074 23. An infinite family of non-isomorphic C∗-algebras with identical K-theory Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 360 (2008), 5343-5354 24. Strongly self-absorbing C∗-algebras (with W. Winter) Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 359 (2007), 3999-4029 25. Recasting the Elliott conjecture (with F. Perera) Mathematische Annalen 338 (2007), 669-702 26. Three applications of the Cuntz semigroup (with N. P. Brown) International Mathematics Research Notices, Vol. 2007, Article rnm068, 14p. 27. Dimension growth for C∗-algebras Advances in Mathematics 213 (2007), 820-848 28. Cancellation does not imply stable rank one Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 38 (2006), 1005-1008 29. Flat dimension growth for C∗-algebras Journal of Functional Analysis 238 (2006), 678-708 30. Infinitely generated perforated ordered K0-groups Mathematica Scandinavica 36 (2005), 147-160 31. On the independence of K-theory and stable rank Journal fur¨ die reine und angewandte Mathematik 578 (2005), 185-199 4 ∗ 32. Strongly perforated K0-groups of simple C -algebras Canadian Mathematical Bulletin 46 (2003), 457-472 33. Comparison of four SNR estimators for QPSK modulations (with N. C. Beaulieu and D. R. Pauluzzi) IEEE Communications Letters 4 (2000), 43-45 Manuscripts in preparation 1. Villadsen algebras Solicited survey for a forthcoming volume of Fields Institute Communications working draft, 14p. 2. Mean dimension zero and the structure of crossed products (with T. Hines and N. C. Phillips), working draft, 35p. 3. Ranks of operators in simple C∗-algebras II (with A. Tikuisis), working draft, 10p. 4. The Cuntz semigroup and perturbations of C∗-algebras (with F. Perera, S. White, and W. Winter), working draft, 16p. Conference Presentations (includes accepted invitations, all talks plenary save AMS/CMS Sessions) 1. Fields Institute 20th Anniversary Colloquium Series (50 minutes), Toronto, 09/12 2.C ∗-algebras (50 minutes), Shanghai, 04/12 3. Conference for Eberhard Kirchberg’s 65th birthday (50 minutes), Copenhagen, 11/11 4. Virginia Operator Theory and Complex Analysis Symposium (keynote speaker, 2 x 50 minutes), 11/11 5.C ∗-algebras and related topics (50 minutes), RIMS Kyoto, 09/11 6. Conference for David Handelman’s 65th birthday (50 minutes), Ottawa, 8/11 7.C ∗-algebras, dynamics, and classification (50 minutes), CRM Barcelona, 06/11 8. Canadian Operator Algebras Symposium (50 minutes), Victoria, 05/11 9. Great Plains Operator Theory Symposium (50 minutes), Phoenix, 05/11 10. North British Functional Analysis Seminar (2x60 minutes), Glasgow, 11/10 11. East Coast Operator Algebras Symposium (50 minutes), Dartmouth College, 10/10 12. Midwest Topology Seminar (50 minutes), Wayne State, 10/10 13. Canadian Operator Symposium (50 minutes), Fredericton, 06/10 14.C ∗-algebras (40 minutes), Oberwolfach, 03/10 15. AIM workshop ”The Cuntz Semigroup” (50 minutes), Palo Alto, 11/09 16. West Coast Operator Algebras Symposium (50 minutes), Reno, 10/09 17. Operator Algebras (50 minutes), Qinhuangdao, China, 09/09 18. CMS Winter Meeting (25 minutes), Ottawa, 12/08 19. East Coast Operator Algebras Symposium (25 minutes), Penn State, 10/08 20. Wabash Mini-conference (50 minutes), IUPUI, 09/08 21.C ∗-algebras (40 minutes), Oberwolfach, 08/08 22. Canada-France Math Congress (50 minutes), Montreal, 06/08 5 23. Canadian Operator Symposium (25 minutes), Toronto, 05/08 24. AMS Meeting, Session on Operator Algebras (25 minutes), Bloomington, 04/08 25.C ∗-algebras Workshop (50 minutes), Fields Institute, 11/07 26. East Coast Operator Algebras Symposium (25 minutes), Wellesley College, 09/07 27. Operator Algebras (50 minutes), East China Normal University, Shanghai, 06/07 28.C ∗-algebras and their Invariants (50 minutes), CRM Barcelona, 06/07 29. AMS Meeting, Session on Operator Algebras (25 minutes), Tucson, 04/07 30. Wabash Modern Analysis Seminar (50 minutes), Wabash College, 04/07 31. Wabash Mini-conference (50 minutes), IUPUI, 09/06 32. Great Plains Operator Symposium (25 minutes), Iowa City, 05/06 33. Operator Algebras and Mathematical Physics (50 minutes), Settat, Morocco, 12/05 34.C ∗-algebras (50 minutes), Oberwolfach, 08/05 35. Canadian Operator Symposium (25 minutes), Ottawa, 06/05 36. Banff International Research Station Workshop on Amenable Systems (25 minutes), 10/04 37. Canadian Operator Symposium (25 minutes), Waterloo, 05/04 38. Weekend Meeting on Operator Algebras (50 minutes), Fields Institute, 03/04 39. Operator Algebras and Mathematical Physics 2 (25 minutes), Sinaia, Romania, 07/03 40. Canadian Operator Symposium (25 minutes), Thunder Bay, 05/02 41. AMS Meeting, Session on Operator Algebras (25 minutes), San Francisco, 10/00 42. Canadian Operator Symposium (25 minutes), Charlottetown, 05/99 43. CMS Winter Meeting (25 minutes), Kingston, 12/98 Summer Schools and Lecture Series 1.
Recommended publications
  • From the Collections of the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Princeton, NJ
    From the collections of the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Princeton, NJ These documents can only be used for educational and research purposes (“Fair use”) as per U.S. Copyright law (text below). By accessing this file, all users agree that their use falls within fair use as defined by the copyright law. They further agree to request permission of the Princeton University Library (and pay any fees, if applicable) if they plan to publish, broadcast, or otherwise disseminate this material. This includes all forms of electronic distribution. Inquiries about this material can be directed to: Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library 65 Olden Street Princeton, NJ 08540 609-258-6345 609-258-3385 (fax) [email protected] U.S. Copyright law test The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or other reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship or research.” If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or other reproduction for purposes in excess of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement. The Princeton Mathematics Community in the 1930s Transcript Number 27 (PMC27) © The Trustees of Princeton University, 1985 ROBERT SINGLETON (with ALBERT TUCKER) This is an interview of Robert Singleton at the Cromwell Inn on 6 June 1984. The interviewer is Albert Tucker.
    [Show full text]
  • Andrew S. Toms Curriculum Vitae
    Andrew S. Toms Curriculum Vitae Contact Information Personal Information Department of Mathematics Born March 12, 1975, Montreal, PQ Purdue University Married with two sons 150 N. University St., West Lafayette, IN Canadian and British citizen 47907-2067 US Permanent Resident Telephone: (765) 494-1901 [email protected] Education 1999–2002 Ph.D. University of Toronto 1997–1999 M.Sc. University of Toronto 1993–1997 B.Sc.H. Queen’s University Employment 2013–2018 University Faculty Scholar, Purdue University 2013–present Professor, Purdue University 2010–2013 Associate Professor, Purdue University 2008–2010 Associate Professor, York University 2006–2008 Assistant Professor, York University 2004–2006 Assistant Professor, University of New Brunswick 2003–2004 NSERC Postdoctoral Fellow, Copenhagen University Honours and Awards 1. Purdue University Faculty Scholar, 2013-2018 2. AMS Centennial Fellowship 2011-12 3. CMS Gilbert de Beauregard Robinson Award (with Wilhelm Winter) 4. Israel Halperin Prize 20101 5. Canada Research Chair Nomination, 2009 (declined) 6. Ontario Early Researcher Award2, 2008–2013 7. NSERC Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2003–2004 8. Daniel B. DeLury Teaching Award, University of Toronto, 2003 9. Israel Halperin Graduate Award, University of Toronto, 2001–2002 10. NSERC Postgraduate Scholarship, 1997–2001 11. Governor General’s Medal3, Queen’s University, 1997 12. Prince of Wales Prize4, Queen’s University, 1997 1Awarded every five years to the mathematician from the Canadian community within 10 years of his/her Ph.D. deemed to have made the greatest contribution to operator algebras. 2Comparable an NSF CAREER Award in terms of funds to researcher. 3Awarded to the graduate with the highest aggregate GPA.
    [Show full text]
  • A Case Study in the Mobilization of the Canadian Civil Liberties ~Overnent'
    Spies, Lies, and a Commission 53 Spies, Lies, and a Commission: A Case Study in the Mobilization of the Canadian Civil Liberties ~overnent' Dominique ClCment It was unnecessary to set up a Royal Commission to do apolice job, and a job that had already been done by the R.C.M.P. There is no Canadian precedent and no authority for setting up of a Royal Commission to sit in secret. There does not seem to be any authority for the action of the Commission in swearing witnesses to secrecy. The Commission refused to advise witnesses as to their rights, even when requested to do so. In many cases the Commission refused access to counsel at a time when the Commissioners well know that charges would be preferred against the person asking counsel. The Commissioners showed strong political bias and prejudice, and by the procedure they adopted they unfairly handicapped the defence of the ac~used.~ This remonstrance was part of a letter sent to Justice Minister J.L. Ilsley by the Civil Rights Union (Toronto) in February, 1947, and emphasizes what civil libertarians found most abhorrent about the Royal Commission on Espionage. The commission, from February to August, 1946, embarked on one of the most thorough abuses of individual rights ever conducted by an organ of the Canadian state.3 It was armed with extensive powers under the War Measures Act, Oficial SecretsAct and the Public InquiriesAct to determine the extent ofthe Soviet spy ring in Canada revealed by the defection of Igor ~ouzenko.~Coming on the heels of the deportation of Japanese Canadians in 1945-6 and extensive censorship under the Defence of Canada Regulations throughout World War Two (WWII), the commission provided civil libertarians with another powerful issue to remind the public of the vulnerability of individual's civil liberties to state abuse.5 The Royal Commission on Espionage played a key role in stimulating the early civil liberties movement in post-WWII Canada.
    [Show full text]
  • Supplemental Release .1998 Klaus Fuchs »
    Q Dr SUPPLEMENTAL RELEASE .1998 92 9292 KLAUS FUCHS » 9292 pages &#39;0"" w &#39;§_&#39;;{D I / r SUBIECT: KLAUSFUCHS FILE: 65-S8805 SECTION:I I .....¢-.4 _.._,_.q- - ¢ """--w--»-_....1.___-.____, - » - ~ , W: .~ ~-_~--=&#39; ¢f?¢*."*&#39;*?"&#39;*..:.&#39;-.1""l"> E ,Yl.. .u.¢..."_..- .1 &#39;¥ 1 1 w 3 &#39;>F."; 1"*;.> "-44,&#39;-1 *2 W,-1 §._ 5 $526»-K&#39;-; 1;. ;~ . - N1 ZTK IE . THE BEST COPIES OBTAINABLE ARE 92w ,1 INCLUDED IN THE REPRODUCTION OF THE FILE, PAGES INCLUDED Ext? $2 4. THAT ARE BLURRED, LIGHT OR OTHERWISE DIFFTCULT TO READ A41 ARE T HE RESULT OF THE CONDITION AND OR QOLOR OF THE ORIGINALS .» qr *92 YA5 <~§_92 PROVEDED. THESE ARE THE BEST iii Kg, -.-<1 COPIES AVAILABLE. _ ~92 I 3 11 % . 1 5. 92:&#39; 1 1 :21 ._,; % L} 3 ! 13 __ Q-92 " _--¢-- . .-_ _,-_.., 4.--.-_-. -- . -..-¢»-» - &#39;~_-I am. new nu lull!!! :2, mm . Iiritwra &#39;3 9. U . mun n1mr;°;;;;_5air$3f=,&#39;_92 . I - Rf-&#39;pt&#39; 11-=1 &#39; xmn $3 :1: ,2 M, . &#39;" v mm nmsixzsaaxcnasszrignggqpfnin-nraum-mcarmlza worn ornzamss. ?°gg:KRF.1]&#39;"fpe1!» . 92 . ¢ . 2! N 92 lusts-x. K31512:3 mam 192123 Ea-that-*5 lltitlzsmi; nub Amt: I» -I v ICES &#39;MIME &#39;-1N ;9292 I4-{nu ma, la-lnbi Qua, - mvzsm :.:=.*m| 92 . nan»: hula, in. Ia mu. sz.xr s;~ __ i _. , Elm-=au&#39;L1antbn1¢aGm&#39;1-It-dfuehl - &#39; - an-lanai - :1 ~ ¢= 11," n:&#39;g;g;,ia j Bill-10 SW-A6328! " &#39; E392U°92 *-&#39;j¬!> %""""J, % ~ &#39; G :1 1"arM¢!s0d an nnutlonaaeu-ufug V it-hoocvarnmruofiluotandbarl l&#39;7Un,m¢uho1-1 u,-393111; ummzaupunwamaé? x lo &#39;-hiam» J-gust" 5, an-nan I-ha mzz.
    [Show full text]
  • Matical Society Was Held at Duke Univers
    THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY The forty-third Annual Meeting of the American Mathe­ matical Society was held at Duke University, Durham, and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, from Tuesday to Thursday, December 29-31, 1936, in conjunc­ tion with the meetings of the Mathematical Association of America. The morning session on Thursday was held at the University of North Carolina and the other sessions at Duke University. In number of papers offered, it was one of the largest of the Annual Meetings. The arrangements as made by the committee, of which Professor J. M. Thomas was chairman and Professors E. T. Browne, W. W. Elliott, J. W. Lasley, and J. H. Roberts were the other local members, were beautifully carried out, and the meeting proved to be one of the most scientifically interesting and socially pleasant in the annals of the Society. At the dinner on Wednesday evening, on motion of Professor T. R. Hollcroft, the Society passed a hearty vote of thanks to the officers of the inviting institutions and to the Committee on Arrangements. Through the generosity of Duke University, rooms in the dormitories of the men's campus were available to the mem­ bers of the two mathematical organizations and their families. The facilities for golf were taken advantage of by several mem­ bers of the Society. On Tuesday evening there was a concert of negro spirituals given under the auspices of Duke University by a negro choir, and on Thursday evening Professor Marston Morse tendered the visitors a delightful piano recital.
    [Show full text]
  • Recruiting Agent" for Spy Ringin Canada Accusation by Gouzenko Sam Carr Also Named
    Rose "Recruiting Agent" For Spy RingIn Canada Accusation By Gouzenko Sam Carr Also Named . HAD ROSE HANDWRITING by Witness as Acting ht Some 'of the documents he saw, 2 ACCUSED PRESENT them the Gouzenko said, had on While the trial proceeded Same Capacity For ', handwriting of Rose. H. S. urged to Gerson and former squadron leader The Communist cell was Mat Nightingale appeared Soviet stop functioning as a "political and' wait. "agents to ed outside the courtroom to be Montreal, May_ 31-(BUP)-Fr,d' group" and to work as ed as witnesses. call- get information on . weapons and Rose. Communist MP on trial on an military purposes," Gouzenko said. The documents mentioned numer- espionage -conspiracy charge was' Before producing documents to be ous agents including Gerson and exhibited. Crown Prosecutor Philippe Nightingale by their cover named in court evidence here today and asked names. as a recruiting agent for a Soviet Brais asked Mr. Justice Wilfred for information regard- ' Lazure to agree to the original ing military matters. They already espionage chief in Canada along documents being filed at the moment, had been gone through at Roses with Sam Carr, former national or- 'and then replaced by copies, the preliminary hearing. They named ganizer of Rose's party in Canada. originals to be available to the court Ottawa meeting places and also and the defense, at any time. Justice named small sums of money m Igor Gouzenko, Soviet secret code agents paid to m expert and Crown witness at Rose's ' Lazure agreed . by the Soviet military i trial, also named Capt.
    [Show full text]
  • Reflecting on the Lessons of the Gouzenko Spy Trials
    1 CIVIL RIGHTS IN A TIME OF FEAR: REFLECTING ON THE LESSONS OF THE GOUZENKO SPY TRIALS The fears we cannot climb become our walls. Noah Ben Shea, Jacob the Baker, 1989 1. INTRODUCTION Although we tend to think of civil and human rights as immutable and even sacrosanct, the history of such rights demonstrate that, sadly, the opposite is sometimes true. These rights are public declarations of what a nation believes and cherishes, the moral and ethical framework of a society, but civil rights, in reality, are only protected when we, as a society, decide they are protected. Fear, be it of espionage, or war, or terrorism, can compel us, individually, and as a community, to do things that, in ordinary circumstances, we would never find acceptable. Absolutes become flexible. Examples, in the long shadow of the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001 on the United States, are easy to find: suspected terrorists are held indefinitely, secret tribunals adjudicate security risks and personal data on everyone is collected. Torture has even been justified, albeit as a last resort. Politicians enact such measures because we let them, because we are all afraid, because draconian measures, in a climate of fear, are what we believe we need. Yet, ironically, even as we demand such measures from our politicians, we simultaneously expect that courts will protect and uphold the very civil rights under threat. We expect judges to resist demagoguery, hysteria, and fear, and coolly and dispassionately dispense justice. But courts are staffed with living, breathing human beings, not legal automatons, and these judges can, just as easily, be caught up in the polemic that national security trumps civil rights in times of fear.
    [Show full text]
  • The Igor Gouzenko Story Honouring a Cold War Hero Presented By
    The Gouzenko Affair and the Start of the Cold War Outline • WWII (Parts I and 2) • Igor Gouzenko - Arrival and Escape from Soviets • Reaction of Allies • Royal Commission and Spy Trials • Consequences • Gouzenko’s Life in Canada • Historic Plaques Commemoration • More Information – Books & Videos WWII – Part 1 1939 - 1941 • Aug. 23, 1939: Nazi-Soviet Pact (and Secret Protocols). • Sept. 1: Germany invades Western half of Poland. • UK, France, Canada declare war on Germany. • Sept. 17: USSR invades Eastern half of Poland. • No one declares war on USSR (which goes on to take over the Baltic states, Bessarabia, and attack Finland). • Between 1939-1941 USSR trades with Nazi Germany and is a supplier of resources, while guaranteeing no Eastern front. • CPC opposes the war effort and is declared illegal. WWII – Part 2 1941 -1945 • June 22, 1941: Operation Barbarossa. • USSR now engaged in a common struggle with allies against Nazi Germany. • Canada and USSR reestablish relations. • CPC reconstituted itself as the Labour Progressive Party (LPP). Now supports the war effort. • 1942: Canada and USSR establish diplomatic missions. • June 1943: Gouzenko arrives in Ottawa. • Oct. 1943: Svetlana arrives. Soon son Andrei is born. • Fred Rose elected LPP MP in 1943 and 1945. Igor Gouzenko 1919 - 1982 • Born in Rogachev. Architecture student at U of Moscow. • Joined Red Army in 1941. • GRU cipher clerk at Soviet Embassy in Ottawa. • What happened to Reiss (1937), Trotsky (1940), Krivitsky (1941), Kravchenko (1966)? • Sept. 2, 1945: Japanese surrender. WWII ends. • Sept. 5: Gouzenko walks out of Soviet Embassy. • First significant international incident of the “Cold War”.
    [Show full text]
  • C:\My Documents\Angel\Jefferey-Williams
    The 31st Jeffery-Williams Prize Lecture Le 31ème Prix de conférence Jeffery-Williams Citation George Elliott ranks among the very best operator algebraists in the world, a place he shares with two Fields medallists. In addition to being extremely productive, he has been a visionary who has set the subject on a new course. A dramatic conjecture that he made ten years ago suggested a mechanism for classifying a large and important class of C*-algebras. Moreover he established the prototype theorem stimulating a decade of intense searching for more pieces of this puzzle. Despite some initial scepticism, Elliott's program has had some dramatic successes; and it is now clear that his classification scheme is of fundamental importance and applies to a significant part of the conjectured class. George A. Elliott University of Toronto This work has led not only to isomorphism theorems for C*-algebras sharing common invariants, but has also led to constructions that show that many C*-algebras have a special structure that was not imagined a decade ago. In the last few years, Elliott's work has been recognized by many awards, including the CRM/Fields Institute prize, a Connaught Transformative grant from the University of Toronto and a Killam research fellowship. The CMS is pleased to honour him as the winner of this year's Jeffery-Williams prize. George Elliott est sans doute l'un des meilleurs au monde dans le domaine des opérateurs d'algèbre, une place qu'il partage avec deux médaillés Fields. En plus d'être extrêmement productif, il est considéré comme un visionnaire après avoir dirigé le domaine dans une toute nouvelle direction.
    [Show full text]
  • New Directions in the History of the Jews in the Polish Lands Jews of Poland
    New Directions in the History of the Jews in the Polish Lands Jews of Poland Series Editor ANTONY POLONSKY (Brandeis University) New Directions in the History of the Jews in the Polish Lands Edited by Antony Polonsky, Hanna We˛. grzynek, and Andrzej Z bikowski Boston 2018 ASSOCIATION OF THE JEWISH HISTORICAL INSTITUTE OF POLAND Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Polonsky, Antony, editor. | Węgrzynek, Hanna, editor. | Ż bikowski, Andrzej, editor. Title: New directions in the history of the Jews in the Polish lands / edited by Antony Polonsky, Hanna Wegrzynek and Andrzej Zbikowski. Description: Boston, MA : Academic Studies Press ; Warsaw, Poland : POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, [2017] | Series: Jews of Poland | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2017044794 (print) | LCCN 2017047212 (ebook) | ISBN 9788394914905 (e-book) | ISBN 9788394914912 (Open Access) | ISBN 9788394426293 (hardback) Subjects: LCSH: Jews--Poland--History--Congresses. | Poland--Ethnic relations--Congresses. | Museums--Educational aspects--Poland--Congresses. Classification: LCC DS135.P6 (ebook) | LCC DS135.P6 N475 2017 (print) | DDC 943.8/004924--dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017044794 Published by Academic Studies Press and by the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, 2018 ISBN 978-8-394914-90-5 (electronic) ISBN 978-8-394914-91-2 (Open Access) ISBN 978-8-394426-29-3 (hardback) Book design by Kryon Publishing Services (P) Ltd. www.kryonpublishing.com Cover design by Ivan Grave On the cover: POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews Photo by www.pzstudio.pl Academic Studies Press 28 Montfern Avenue Brighton, MA 02135, USA [email protected] www.academicstudiespress.com Effective July 31, 2018, this book will be subject to a CC-BY-NC license.
    [Show full text]
  • Another Math Department Newsletter
    Department of Mathematics University of Toronto April 2008 Chair's Report ....................................................................... 1 The Changing of the Guard .................................................. 2 John Bland Honoured ........................................................... 2 In a number of ways, this Alumni News ........................................................................ 2 has been a transitional year A Great AlumnusCONTENTS Chair’s Reportfor the Department of Math- J.C. Fields (1863 - 1932) 2007 - 2008ematics. John Bland has Posthumous Degree finished two terms as chair, Robert Barrington Leigh (1986 – 2006) with only a one year break A Greeting Card from Alice in between. We are all very Arts and Science Spring Reunion 2007 Our Undergraduates .............................................................. 4 grateful for all the work he Thoughts on Teaching has done in the last 8 years Putnam Results 2006 to build the department. I University of Toronto Undergraduate Mathematics am serving as pinch hitter Competition, March 2007 chair for the second time in An Undergraduate Math Conference in Canada 4 years until Kumar Murty 2007 DeLury Awards (TA) Famous Problems .................................................................. 4 Professor Jeremy Quastel, takes over as our new chair Trisecting an Angle the Origami Way Acting Chair in July 2008. We are all looking forward to Kumar’s There is More than One Way to Publicize the Solution of leadership for the next few years as the department builds a Famous Problem on its successes. The dean of Arts and Sciences, Pekka A Very Intriguing Problem Life Embraces Mathematics .................................................. 6 Sinervo, is also stepping down, to pursue his research in Knots in Brains experimental high energy physics with the Atlas project. A Phishing search is presently on for his replacement and in the mean- Keyfitz Public Lectures May 2007 time, Meric Gertler will serve as acting dean.
    [Show full text]
  • Interview with W. A. J. Luxemburg
    W. A. J. LUXEMBURG (b. 1929) INTERVIEWED BY SHIRLEY K. COHEN June 12, 19 & 22, 2001 Photo taken in 1979 ARCHIVES CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Pasadena, California Subject area Mathematics Abstract An interview in three sessions, in June 2001, with Wilhelmus Anthonius Josephus (Wim) Luxemburg, professor of mathematics, emeritus, in the Division of Physics, Mathematics, and Astronomy. Dr. Luxemburg received his BA. from the University of Leiden (1950) and his doctorate from the Delft Institute of Technoloy (1955). He and his wife emigrated to Canada, first to Kingston and then to the University of Toronto as a postdoc with Israel Halperin. In 1958, he came to Caltech as an assistant professor in the mathematics department, at the invitation of H. Frederic Bohnenblust. He became a full professor in 1962, served as executive officer for mathematics from 1970 to 1985, and became professor emeritus in 2000. He recalls his childhood during the First and Second World Wars in Delft, and the deprivations of the postwar period. Discusses his doctorate with Adriaan C. Zaanen at Delft Institute of Technology, on Banach function spaces. Attends http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_Luxemburg_W 1954 International Congress of Mathematicians in Amsterdam. Invitation from Halperin to come to Canada. His postdoc at the University of Toronto. Travels in Canada. Invited to join Caltech faculty by Bohnenblust. He comments on the development of mathematics at Caltech, including expansion of applied mathematics and joint appointments with engineering division. Discusses Olga Taussky-Todd as Caltech’s first woman full professor; Caltech’s abortive attempt to merge with Immaculate Heart College; his membership on Aims and Goals Committee.
    [Show full text]