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European Mathematical Society
CONTENTS EDITORIAL TEAM EUROPEAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF MARTIN RAUSSEN Department of Mathematical Sciences, Aalborg University Fredrik Bajers Vej 7G DK-9220 Aalborg, Denmark e-mail: [email protected] ASSOCIATE EDITORS VASILE BERINDE Department of Mathematics, University of Baia Mare, Romania NEWSLETTER No. 52 e-mail: [email protected] KRZYSZTOF CIESIELSKI Mathematics Institute June 2004 Jagiellonian University Reymonta 4, 30-059 Kraków, Poland EMS Agenda ........................................................................................................... 2 e-mail: [email protected] STEEN MARKVORSEN Editorial by Ari Laptev ........................................................................................... 3 Department of Mathematics, Technical University of Denmark, Building 303 EMS Summer Schools.............................................................................................. 6 DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark EC Meeting in Helsinki ........................................................................................... 6 e-mail: [email protected] ROBIN WILSON On powers of 2 by Pawel Strzelecki ........................................................................ 7 Department of Pure Mathematics The Open University A forgotten mathematician by Robert Fokkink ..................................................... 9 Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK e-mail: [email protected] Quantum Cryptography by Nuno Crato ............................................................ 15 COPY EDITOR: KELLY -
Undercurrents of German Influence in Maryland,” a Word of Explanation Is Necessary
UNDERCURRENTS OF 1 GERMAN INFLUENCE IN MARYLAND he Society for the History of the Germans in Maryland celebrates tonight the twenty fifth anniversary of its foundation. It is but nat Tural to pause a moment and reflect upon what has been done before passing on to renewed endeavor. What has the Society been able to accomplish in the first quarter century of its existence? The answer can readily be given. The Society has rescued from oblivion the names and records of noble pioneers in American history, it has searched for and discovered the traces, south of Mason and Dixon’s line, of that sturdy Teutonic stock, which has contributed to the people of the United States more than one quarter of their blood and no less to their economic and cultural develop ment. To speak more specifically, the Society has shown that the eco nomic foundation and commercial prosperity of the city of Baltimore was dependent, vastly and indispensably, upon German settlers, many of whom trekked from Pennsylvania, others came from over the sea, and were founders of families prominent in the annals of the city. The Society has called attention to the German pioneers of Western Maryland, in the Counties Frederick, Allegany, and Washington. Hagerstown, once the westernmost settlement, perpetuates the name of the original settler, Jonathan Hager, who held a seat in the Colonial Assembly of provincial Maryland. As in Pennsylvania so in Western Maryland the German stock before the Revolutionary War founded the agricultural prosperity of the Commonwealth of Maryland. The Society has searched archives and church records, made available historical materials, and its reports and publications are to be found in every library that makes any pretensions to storing adequately the sources of American history. -
List of Members
LIST OF MEMBERS, ALFRED BAKER, M.A., Professor of Mathematics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada. ARTHUR LATHAM BAKER, C.E., Ph.D., Professor of Mathe matics, Stevens School, Hpboken., N. J. MARCUS BAKER, U. S. Geological Survey, Washington, D.C. JAMES MARCUS BANDY, B.A., M.A., Professor of Mathe matics and Engineering, Trinit)^ College, N. C. EDGAR WALES BASS, Professor of Mathematics, U. S. Mili tary Academy, West Point, N. Y. WOOSTER WOODRUFF BEMAN, B.A., M.A., Member of the London Mathematical Society, Professor of Mathe matics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. R. DANIEL BOHANNAN, B.Sc, CE., E.M., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. CHARLES AUGUSTUS BORST, M.A., Assistant in Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. EDWARD ALBERT BOWSER, CE., LL.D., Professor of Mathe matics, Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J. JOHN MILTON BROOKS, B.A., Instructor in Mathematics, College of New Jersey, Princeton, N. J. ABRAM ROGERS BULLIS, B.SC, B.C.E., Macedon, Wayne Co., N. Y. WILLIAM ELWOOD BYERLY, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, Harvard University, Cambridge*, Mass. WILLIAM CAIN, C.E., Professor of Mathematics and Eng ineering, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. CHARLES HENRY CHANDLER, M.A., Professor of Mathe matics, Ripon College, Ripon, Wis. ALEXANDER SMYTH CHRISTIE, LL.M., Chief of Tidal Division, U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, Washington, D. C. JOHN EMORY CLARK, M.A., Professor of Mathematics, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. FRANK NELSON COLE, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathe matics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. -
"Choose Your School" Guide
AN OVERVIEW OF SCHOOL CHOICE BALTIMORE CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS MAKING A GREAT CHOICE MAKING A GREAT MIDDLE & HIGH SCHOOL FOR CHOICE GUIDE 2012-13 1 Use this checklist as you think about where you want to go to middle or high school next year. Read this guide to find out about Get help with your decision by different schools and the school talking with your teachers, school choice process. counselor, school choice liaison, family and friends. Ask yourself about your interests at school—academics, job training, Think about when the school clubs, sports and other things. day starts and ends, and about Think about which schools best transportation. Be sure you can match those interests. get to the schools you’re interested in—every day, on time. Go to the choice fair on Saturday, November 19, to talk with school Decide on the five schools representatives and get details you’d most like to attend next about schools that interest you. year, and complete and submit your choice application by Thursday, December 22. Attend the open houses at schools you think might be right for you. NEED MORE HELP TO MAKE THE BEST CHOICE? Call City SChoolS at theSe numberS: Office of Enrollment, Choice and Transfers ....410-396-8600 Office of Learning to Work .........................443-642-3814 The primary district contact for school choice For information about internships and other career-focused programs 2 CONTENTS ChooSing your SChool: exPloring your oPtionS: an overview............................................. 2 a key to SChool ProfileS ..................... 14 How Choice Works ...........................................................3 SChool ProfileS ...................................... 15 Key Dates, 2011-12 ...........................................................3 Making an Informed Choice ........................................... -
The History of the Abel Prize and the Honorary Abel Prize the History of the Abel Prize
The History of the Abel Prize and the Honorary Abel Prize The History of the Abel Prize Arild Stubhaug On the bicentennial of Niels Henrik Abel’s birth in 2002, the Norwegian Govern- ment decided to establish a memorial fund of NOK 200 million. The chief purpose of the fund was to lay the financial groundwork for an annual international prize of NOK 6 million to one or more mathematicians for outstanding scientific work. The prize was awarded for the first time in 2003. That is the history in brief of the Abel Prize as we know it today. Behind this government decision to commemorate and honor the country’s great mathematician, however, lies a more than hundred year old wish and a short and intense period of activity. Volumes of Abel’s collected works were published in 1839 and 1881. The first was edited by Bernt Michael Holmboe (Abel’s teacher), the second by Sophus Lie and Ludvig Sylow. Both editions were paid for with public funds and published to honor the famous scientist. The first time that there was a discussion in a broader context about honoring Niels Henrik Abel’s memory, was at the meeting of Scan- dinavian natural scientists in Norway’s capital in 1886. These meetings of natural scientists, which were held alternately in each of the Scandinavian capitals (with the exception of the very first meeting in 1839, which took place in Gothenburg, Swe- den), were the most important fora for Scandinavian natural scientists. The meeting in 1886 in Oslo (called Christiania at the time) was the 13th in the series. -
BSHM Christmas Meeting 2020 Titles & Abstracts June Barrow-Green
BSHM Christmas Meeting 2020 Titles & Abstracts June Barrow-Green (Open University): “I found out myself by the triangles”: The mathematical progress of Robert Leslie Ellis (1817-1859) as told by himself. Abstract Robert Leslie Ellis was one of the most intriguing and wide-ranging intellectual figures of early Victorian Britain, his contributions ranging from advanced mathematical analysis to profound commentaries on philosophy and classics. From the age of nine he kept a journal in which, amongst other things, he recorded his mathematical progress. In this talk, I shall use Ellis’s journal to tell the story of his unconventional journey from home-tutored student in Bath in 1827 to Senior Wrangler in the Cambridge Mathematical Tripos of 1840. Philip Beeley (University of Oxford): Whither the history of mathematics? Historical reflections on a historical discipline Abstract Beginning with the Oberwolfach meetings in the 1970s, the talk will consider some of the profound perspectival changes in the history of mathematics that have taken place over the last half century. Initially, these changes focused on giving greater weight to social history alongside what came to be known as the internalist approach, but increasingly scholars have come to see mathematics as deeply woven into the fabric of human culture and its history thus as complementary to other historical disciplines. The talk will provide an overview of this remarkable development and seek to assess its success. Raymond Flood (Kellogg College, Oxford): John Fauvel: life, labours and legacy This talk is dedicated to the memory of my dear friend and colleague John Fauvel (1947- 2001) whose enthusiasm and support for the BSHM knew no bounds. -
Maintenance of Maryland's Public School Buildings, FY2019
Maintenance of Maryland’s Public School Buildings STATE OF MARYLAND INTERAGENCY COMMISSION ON SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION FY 2019 Annual Report October 1, 2019 Interagency Commission on School Construction 200 West Baltimore Street Baltimore, Maryland 21201-2595 410-767-0617 http://iac.maryland.gov [email protected] INTERAGENCY COMMISSION ON SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION Karen Salmon, Chair, State Superintendent of Schools Denise Avara, Appointee of the Governor, Member of the Public Ellington Churchill, Secretary, Maryland Department of General Services Brian Gibbons, Appointee of the Speaker of the House, Member of the Public Barbara Hoffman, Former Appointee of the President of the Senate, Member of the Public Edward Kasemeyer, Appointee of the President of the Senate; Member of the Public Gloria Lawlah, Appointee of the President of the Senate, Member of the Public Dick Lombardo, Appointee of the Governor, Member of the Public Robert S. McCord, Secretary, Maryland Department of Planning Todd Schuler, Appointee of the Speaker of the House, Member of the Public Robert Gorrell, Executive Director Joan Schaefer, Deputy Director Alex Donahue, Deputy Director The following individuals within the Staff of the Interagency Commission on School Construction have made dedicated contributions of time and effort to the Maintenance Assessment Program and the development of this annual report: Jennifer Bailey, Maintenance Assessor (Maintenance Group) Michael Bitz, Maintenance Assessor (Maintenance Group) Brooke Finneran, Administrative Officer (Maintenance Group) David Freese, Facilities Maintenance Group Manager (Maintenance Group) TABLE OF CONTENTS I. PreK-12 Public School Maintenance in Maryland 1 A. FY 2019 Program 1 Table A: LEA Maintenance Effectiveness Report 1 B. Background 2 C. Summary 4 Table B: Maintenance Survey Results, Fiscal Years 1981-2019 5 II. -
National Blue Ribbon Schools Recognized 1982-2015
NATIONAL BLUE RIBBON SCHOOLS PROGRAM Schools Recognized 1982 Through 2015 School Name City Year ALABAMA Academy for Academics and Arts Huntsville 87-88 Anna F. Booth Elementary School Irvington 2010 Auburn Early Education Center Auburn 98-99 Barkley Bridge Elementary School Hartselle 2011 Bear Exploration Center for Mathematics, Science Montgomery 2015 and Technology School Beverlye Magnet School Dothan 2014 Bob Jones High School Madison 92-93 Brewbaker Technology Magnet High School Montgomery 2009 Brookwood Forest Elementary School Birmingham 98-99 Buckhorn High School New Market 01-02 Bush Middle School Birmingham 83-84 C.F. Vigor High School Prichard 83-84 Cahaba Heights Community School Birmingham 85-86 Calcedeaver Elementary School Mount Vernon 2006 Cherokee Bend Elementary School Mountain Brook 2009 Clark-Shaw Magnet School Mobile 2015 Corpus Christi School Mobile 89-90 Crestline Elementary School Mountain Brook 01-02, 2015 Daphne High School Daphne 2012 Demopolis High School Demopolis 2008 East Highland Middle School Sylacauga 84-85 Edgewood Elementary School Homewood 91-92 Elvin Hill Elementary School Columbiana 87-88 Enterprise High School Enterprise 83-84 EPIC Elementary School Birmingham 93-94 Eura Brown Elementary School Gadsden 91-92 Forest Avenue Academic Magnet Elementary School Montgomery 2007 Forest Hills School Florence 2012 Fruithurst Elementary School Fruithurst 2010 George Hall Elementary School Mobile 96-97 George Hall Elementary School Mobile 2008 1 of 216 School Name City Year Grantswood Community School Irondale 91-92 Guntersville Elementary School Guntersville 98-99 Heard Magnet School Dothan 2014 Hewitt-Trussville High School Trussville 92-93 Holtville High School Deatsville 2013 Holy Spirit Regional Catholic School Huntsville 2013 Homewood High School Homewood 83-84 Homewood Middle School Homewood 83-84, 96-97 Indian Valley Elementary School Sylacauga 89-90 Inverness Elementary School Birmingham 96-97 Ira F. -
Operating Budget 2015-16
OPERATING BUDGET 2015-16 Adopted by the Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners May 4, 2015 BALTIMORE CITY BOARD OF SCHOOL COMMISSIONERS Shanaysha Sauls, Chair David Stone, Vice-Chair Lisa Akchin Cheryl Casciani Linda Chinnia Marnell Cooper Tina Hike-Hubbard Martha James-Hassan Peter Kannam Eddie Hawkins Jr., Student Commissioner BALTIMORE CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Gregory Thornton, Chief Executive Officer Naomi Gubernick, Chief of Staff Linda Chen, Chief Academic Officer Lisa Grillo, Human Capital Officer Theresa Jones, Interim Achievement and Accountability Officer Donald Kennedy, Sr., Chief Financial Officer Keith Scroggins, Operations Officer Kenneth Thompson, Chief Technology Officer Tammy Turner, Chief Legal Counsel BUDGET TEAM Ryan Hemminger, Budget Director Kevin Cronin Nicole Johnson Joshua Portnoy Charles Weaver BALTIMORE CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS 200 E. North Ave Room 403 Baltimore, Maryland 21202 410-396-8745 May 4, 2015 Dear Baltimore City Public Schools Community, Baltimore’s children and youth are the future of our city, and City Schools’ most important responsibility is to make sure that future is bright, successful, and filled with possibility. The Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners’ vision for our city’s public schools describes our responsibility in a concrete way: Every student will graduate ready to achieve excellence in higher education and the global workforce. As we began to develop the district’s operating budget for the 2015-16 year, the need to make that vision a reality for all our students—regardless of the neighborhood in which they live, their background, or their individual strengths or challenges—guided our work. This budget focuses on providing every student with every opportunity to be successful. -
Einstein, History, and Other Passions : the Rebellion Against Science at the End of the Twentieth Century
Einstein, history, and other passions : the rebellion against science at the end of the twentieth century The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Holton, Gerald James. 2000. Einstein, history, and other passions : the rebellion against science at the end of the twentieth century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Published Version http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674004337 Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:23975375 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA EINSTEIN, HISTORY, ANDOTHER PASSIONS ;/S*6 ? ? / ? L EINSTEIN, HISTORY, ANDOTHER PASSIONS E?3^ 0/" Cf72fM?y GERALD HOLTON A HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS C%772^r?<%gf, AizziMc^zzyeZZy LozzJozz, E?zg/%??J Q AOOO Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book and Addison-Wesley was aware of a trademark claim, the designations have been printed in capital letters. PHYSICS RESEARCH LIBRARY NOV 0 4 1008 Copyright @ 1996 by Gerald Holton All rights reserved HARVARD UNIVERSITY Printed in the United States of America An earlier version of this book was published by the American Institute of Physics Press in 1995. First Harvard University Press paperback edition, 2000 o/ CoMgre.w C%t%/og;Hg-zM-PMMt'%tz'c7t Dzztzz Holton, Gerald James. -
Albert Bernhardt Faust
Albert Bernhardt Faust April 20, 1870 — February 8, 1951 Albert Bernhardt Faust, Emeritus Professor of German, died on February 8, 1951, after more than 45 years of association with Cornell University. He was born on April 20, 1870 in Baltimore, Md., where he attended the German Zions School, and where he graduated from Johns Hopkins University in 1889. There, too, he received his Ph. D. degree with a dissertation on Charles Sealsfield. This was his earliest contribution to the study of German- American relations, a field in which he was later to attain a place of great distinction. After a few years’ work at German Universities he became Instructor in German at his alma mater in 1894. Two years later he was appointed Associate Professor at Wesleyan University and, in 1903 Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin. He was called to Cornell University in 1904, where he remained until his retirement in 1938 as Assistant Professor and, later, Professor of German. Under his energetic leadership the Department became one of the prominent centers of Germanic studies in America. His life-long membership in several learned societies—the American Historical Association, the Modern Language Association of America, the German Goethe Society, the Steuben Society, the American Dialect Society—suggests the range of his interests: they were historical, literary, and philological. It was as the author of The German Element in the United States that Albert Faust established his solid reputation as a cultural historian: when that work appeared in 1909 it was almost at once recognized as the first comprehensive survey of a subject which, until then, had been regarded as little more than a matter of local, though sometimes zealous, investigation. -
Mathematics of the Gateway Arch Page 220
ISSN 0002-9920 Notices of the American Mathematical Society ABCD springer.com Highlights in Springer’s eBook of the American Mathematical Society Collection February 2010 Volume 57, Number 2 An Invitation to Cauchy-Riemann NEW 4TH NEW NEW EDITION and Sub-Riemannian Geometries 2010. XIX, 294 p. 25 illus. 4th ed. 2010. VIII, 274 p. 250 2010. XII, 475 p. 79 illus., 76 in 2010. XII, 376 p. 8 illus. (Copernicus) Dustjacket illus., 6 in color. Hardcover color. (Undergraduate Texts in (Problem Books in Mathematics) page 208 ISBN 978-1-84882-538-3 ISBN 978-3-642-00855-9 Mathematics) Hardcover Hardcover $27.50 $49.95 ISBN 978-1-4419-1620-4 ISBN 978-0-387-87861-4 $69.95 $69.95 Mathematics of the Gateway Arch page 220 Model Theory and Complex Geometry 2ND page 230 JOURNAL JOURNAL EDITION NEW 2nd ed. 1993. Corr. 3rd printing 2010. XVIII, 326 p. 49 illus. ISSN 1139-1138 (print version) ISSN 0019-5588 (print version) St. Paul Meeting 2010. XVI, 528 p. (Springer Series (Universitext) Softcover ISSN 1988-2807 (electronic Journal No. 13226 in Computational Mathematics, ISBN 978-0-387-09638-4 version) page 315 Volume 8) Softcover $59.95 Journal No. 13163 ISBN 978-3-642-05163-0 Volume 57, Number 2, Pages 201–328, February 2010 $79.95 Albuquerque Meeting page 318 For access check with your librarian Easy Ways to Order for the Americas Write: Springer Order Department, PO Box 2485, Secaucus, NJ 07096-2485, USA Call: (toll free) 1-800-SPRINGER Fax: 1-201-348-4505 Email: [email protected] or for outside the Americas Write: Springer Customer Service Center GmbH, Haberstrasse 7, 69126 Heidelberg, Germany Call: +49 (0) 6221-345-4301 Fax : +49 (0) 6221-345-4229 Email: [email protected] Prices are subject to change without notice.