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         Morawetz Cathleen:     more detail
  1. Notes on Time Decay and Scattering for Some Hyperbolic Problems (CBMS-NSF Regional Conference Series in Applied Mathematics) (Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics) by Cathleen S. Morawetz, 1987-01-01
  2. Selected Works of Eberhard Hopf with Commentaries (Collected Works) by Eberhard Hopf, Cathleen S. Morawetz, et all 2002-12-10
  3. Kurt Otto Friedrichs. Selecta. 2 Vols by Cathleen S. Ed., (Kurt Otto Friedrich) Morawetz, 1986-01-01
  4. Lectures on Nonlinear Waves and Shocks by Cathleen S. Morawetz, 1982-01-01
  5. Cathleen Morawetz A Great Mathematician (Methods and Applications of Analysis Vol. 7, No. 3) by MAA Editors, 2000-01-01
  6. Kurt Otto Friedrichs: Selecta. 2 volume set by Kurt Otto. Edited by Cathleen S. Morawetz Friedrichs, 1986
  7. KURT OTTO FRIEDRICHS: SELECTA (TWO VOLUMES) by Kurt Otto. Edited by Cathleen S. Morawetz Friedrichs, 1986-01-01
  8. Kurt Otto Friedrichs Selecta, 1st Edition 2 Volumes by Cathleen S. Morawetz, 1986-01-01
  9. Lectures on nonlinear waves and shocks (Lectures on mathematics and physics) by Cathleen S Morawetz, 1981
  10. Kurt Otto Friedrichs Selecta 1ST Edition 2vol by Cathleen Morawetz, 1986
  11. Notes on time decay and scattering for some hyperbolic problems (Regional conference series in applied mathematics) by Cathleen S Morawetz, 1975
  12. Contracting Spherical Shocks Treated By Perturbation Method. An Abridgment by Cathleen Morawetz, 1957

61. IMUCC 109
IMUCC 109. morawetz, cathleen Synge. Named by President Clinton toreceive a 1998 National Medal for Science, 199812-. IMUCC 109.
http://wwwmaths.anu.edu.au/other/imu/109/imucc109.html
Mathematical Sciences Institute
Australian National University
ACT 0200
AUSTRALIA
Facsimile (+61) (2)6125 5549
e-mail: Bernhard.Neumann@maths.anu.edu.au IMU CANBERRA CIRCULAR NO. 109 MARCH 1999
http://wwwmaths.anu.edu.au/other/imucc.html

Though there has been some action in the question of my successor as editor and publisher of the IMUCC, the problems have not been solved yet. There is still hope, but I am likely to have still to edit and publish IMUCC 110 in 3 months from now. Please continue to send information on meetings to Dr David Easdown, Institute of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, AUSTRALIA [de@maths.usyd.edu.au] (or to me), and on visitors to Australasia to the Editor of the Australian Ma thematical Society GAZETTE, Mr Basil R. Benjamin, Institute of Mathematics, University of South Australia, The Levels, SA 5095, AUSTRALIA [austms.gazette@unisa.edu au] for publication in that GAZETTE. Please send information on visitors to New Zealand als o to Dr David McIntyre, Department of Mathematics, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019 Auckland, NEW ZEALAND [mcintyre@math.auckland.ac.nz], for publication in the Newsletter of the New Zealand Mathematical Society. B.H. Neumann

62. IMUCC 102, June 1997
IMUCC 102 MOLER, Cleve R. Elected a member of the (US) National Academyof Engineering, 199702-14. IMUCC 102 morawetz, cathleen Synge.
http://wwwmaths.anu.edu.au/other/imu/102/imucc102.html
ISSN 0311-0621 Mathematical Sciences Institute
Australian National University
ACT 0200
AUSTRALIA
Facsimile (+61) (6) 249 5549
e-mail: bhn102@phys.anu.edu.au
IMU CANBERRA CIRCULAR
NO. 102 JUNE 1997
http://wwwmaths.anu.edu.au/other/imucc.html
102.1 Introduction
The International Mathematical Union has provided funds to distribute hard copies of this Circular to recipients in some countries where access to the WWW is lacking. Users in countries like America [both North and South], much of Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Japan will have to use http://wwwmaths.anu.edu.au/other/imucc.html to read it. Please continue to send information on meetings to Dr David Easdown, Institute of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, AUSTRALIA [easdown_d@maths.su.oz.au] (or to me), and on visitors to Australasia to Professor T.M. Mills, Departme nt of Mathematics, La Trobe University College of Northern Victoria, POB 199, Bendigo, Vic 3550, AUSTRALIA [gazette@redgum.bendigo.latrobe.edu.au] for publication in the Australian Mathematical Society GAZETTE. Please send information on visitors to New Zealand also to Dr David McIntyre, Department of Mathematics, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019 Auckland, NEW ZEALAND [mcintyre@math.auckland.ac.nz], for publication in the Newsletter of the New Zealand Mathematical Society. B.H. Neumann

63. 43 Femmes Mathématiciennes
1852) Sheila Scott Macintyre (19101960) Ada Isabel Maddison (18691950) HelenAbbot Merrill (18641949) cathleen Synge morawetz (1923) Hanna Neumann (1914
http://www.mjc-andre.org/pages/amej/evenements/cong_02/part_suj/fiches/femmes.ht
43 exemples d'avant 1987 Women of mathematics. Maria Gaetana Agnesi (17181799)
Nina Karlovna Bari (19011961)
Ruth Aaronson Bari (1917)
Dorothy Lewis Bernstein (1914)
Gertrude Mary Cox (19001978)
Kate Fenchel (19051983)
Irmgard Flugge-Lotz (19031974)
Hilda Geiringer von Mises (18931973)
Sophie Germain (17761831) (pp. 4756)
Evelyn Boyd Granville (1924) (pp. 5761)
Ellen Amanda Hayes (18511930) Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906) Ian Mueller, Hypatia (370?415) Sofja Aleksandrovna Janovskaja (18961966) Carol Karp (19261972) Claribel Kendall (18891965) Pelageya Yakovlevna Polubarinova-Kochina (1899) Sofia Vasilevna Kovalevskaia (18501891) Edna Ernestine Kramer Lassar (19021984) Christine Ladd-Franklin (18471930) Augusta Ada Lovelace (18151852) Sheila Scott Macintyre (19101960) Ada Isabel Maddison (18691950) Helen Abbot Merrill (18641949) Cathleen Synge Morawetz (1923) Hanna Neumann (19141971) Mary Frances Winston Newson (18691959) Emmy Noether (18821935) Rozsa Peter (19051977) Mina Rees (1902) Julia Bowman Robinson (19191985) Charlotte Angas Scott (18581931) Mary Emily Sinclair (18781955) Mary Fairfax Greig Somerville (17801872) Pauline Sperry (18851967) Alicia Boole Stott (18601940) Olga Taussky-Todd (1906) Mary Catherine Bishop Weiss (19301966) Anna Johnson Pell Wheeler (18831966) Grace Chisholm Young (18681944) This book includes essays on 43 women mathematicians, each essay consisting of a biographical sketch, a review/assessment of her work, and a bibliography which usually lists most of her mathematical works, a few works about her, and occasionally a few other references. The essays are arranged alphabetically by the women's best-known professional names. A better arrangement would have been by the periods within which the women worked; an approximation to that can be achieved by using the list in Appendix A of the included women ordered by birthdate. With its many appendices and its two good indexes, the bibliographic structure of this book is excellent. This together with its reviews of the work of many less-known women mathematicians makes it a valuable contribution to the history of mathematics.

64. Www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infonews/release/1993/130%20Convocation%20honours%20set,%20
ù cathleen morawetz, professor of mathematics at New York University's CourantInstitute of Mathematical Sciences. She will receive a Doctor of Mathematics.
http://www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infonews/release/1993/130: Convocation honours set,
For immediate release UW awards 4 honorary degrees at fall convocation WATERLOO, Ont. A leader in distance education, a pioneering mathematician, a women's issues historian, and a builder of Canada's nationhood are the four honorary degree recipients at the University of Waterloo's fall convocation on Oct. 23. As well, UW will honor four academics who have retired from the university. Three will be awarded the title "Professor Emeritus," while the fourth will receive the title "Honorary Member of the University." The 67th convocation, to be held in the Physical Activities Complex, will also mark the quarter-century anniversary of UW's successful distance education (correspondence) program. The four honorary degree recipients are as follows: ù John Daniel, vice-chancellor of The Open University in Britain. He will receive a Doctor of Laws. Daniel will deliver the convocation address for graduating students in the faculties of applied health sciences and arts. The ceremony begins at 10 a.m. Daniel, a former president of Laurentian University in Sudbury, has been involved in distance education since 1972, when he was a visiting lecturer at The Open University. Also, he has been a vice- rector at Concordia University in Montreal and a vice-president at Athabasca University in Alberta. ù Margaret Wade Labarge, an adjunct professor of history at Carleton University in Ottawa. She will receive a Doctor of Laws at the morning session of convocation, beginning at 10 a.m. Labarge, who has taught at both Carleton and the University of Ottawa, has written eight books on medieval history most recently, Women in Medieval Life and prepared a report for the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, entitled The Cultural Tradition of Canadian Women, the Historical Background. She is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. ù Cathleen Morawetz, professor of mathematics at New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. She will receive a Doctor of Mathematics. Morawetz will give the convocation address for graduating students in the faculties of engineering, environmental studies, mathematics and sciences, plus the independent studies program. The ceremony begins at 2 p.m. Morawetz, an expert in applications of partial differential equations, was made director of the Courant Institute in 1984 the first woman in the United States to head a mathematics institute. She has twice been a Guggenheim Fellow and was presented with the Lester R. Ford Award of the Mathematical Association of America for her 1979 article on non-linear conservation equations. ù Jean Pigott, recently chairperson of the National Capital Commission in Ottawa. She will receive a Doctor of Laws at the afternoon session of convocation, beginning at 2 p.m. Pigott, a former federal politician, was the ninth chairman of the NCC and the first woman appointed to the position. She was instrumental in broadening the mandate of the NCC from enhancing the capital as the symbol of Canadian nationhood to include as well Canada's social and cultural components. She has been a member of the advisory PRAGMA council of UW's school of urban and regional planning. The three UW professors to be granted Professor Emeritus titles are Janos Aczel, a pure mathematician with hundreds of research papers to his credit; William Forbes, the founding director of the gerontology program, a prolific researcher on aging, and a former dean of mathematics; and Peter Nash, a former dean of environmental studies and a wide-ranging researcher in applied geography, housing and planning. Norman Ashton, the founding chair of the department of kinesiology and the developer of the well-known 10BX fitness program for women, will be awarded the title "Honorary Member of the University." - 30 - From John Morris, UW News Bureau, 888-4567, ext. 6047 Release no. 130 October 6, 1993

65. MAA-Amazon Math Book List
Kurt Otto Friedrichs Selecta Vol 1 cathleen S. morawetz (Editor)/ Hardcover / Published 1986 Our Price $102.00 (Special Order).
http://www.maa.org/amazon/diffeq/partdiffeq2.html
Partial Differential Equations
Page 2
Each page has approximately 100 titles. Integrable and Superintegrable Systems Boris a Kupershmidt (Editor) / Hardcover / Published 1991
Our Price: $56.00 ~ You Save: $24.00 (30%) (Special Order) Integral Manifolds and Inertial Manifolds for Dissipative Partial Differential Equations (Applied Mathematical Sciences, Vol 70) P. Constantin / Hardcover / Published 1989
Our Price: $39.80 (Special Order) An Introduction to Partial Differential Equations (Texts in Applied Mathematics, Vol 13) Michael Renardy, Robert C. Rogers / Hardcover / Published 1993
Our Price: $46.95 (Special Order) Introduction to Partial Differential Equations : With Applications Mark A. Pinsky / Hardcover / Published 1984
(Publisher Out Of Stock) Introduction to Regularity Theory for Nonlinear Elliptic Systems (Lectures in Mathematics) Mariano Giaquinta / Paperback / Published 1994
Our Price: $29.50 (Special Order) An Introduction to the Mathematical Theory of the Navier-Stokes Equations : Linearized Steady Problems Vol 1 Giovanni P. Galdi / Hardcover / Published 1994
(Publisher Out Of Stock) An Introduction to the Mathematical Theory of the Navier-Stokes Equations : Nonlinear Steady Problems (Springer Tracts in Natural Philsophy, Vol 39) Vol 2

66. Www.information.uwaterloo.ca/Gazette/1993/Gazette,%20October%206,%201993/Honorar
Canada. ù cathleen morawetz, professor of mathematics at New YorkUniversity's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. She
http://www.information.uwaterloo.ca/Gazette/1993/Gazette, October 6, 1993/Honora
A leader in distance education, a pioneering mathematician, a women's issues historian, and a builder of national institutions are the four honorary degree recipients for UW's fall convocation on October 23. As well, UW will honor four academics who have retired from the university. Three will be awarded the title "Professor Emeritus," and the fourth will receive the title "Honorary Member of the University." The 67th convocation will also mark the quarter-century anniversary of UW's successful distance education (correspondence) program. The four honorary degree recipients are as follows: ù John Daniel, vice-chancellor of The Open University in Britain. He will receive a Doctor of Laws degree. Daniel will deliver the convocation address for graduating students in the faculties of applied health sciences and arts, which begins at 10 a.m. Daniel, a former president of Laurentian University of Sudbury, has been involved in distance education since 1972, when he was a visiting lecturer at The Open University. Also, he has been a vice-rector at Concordia University in MontrŽal and a vice-president at Athabasca University in Alberta. ù Margaret Wade Labarge, an adjunct professor of history at Carleton University in Ottawa. She will receive a Doctor of Laws degree at the morning session of convocation, beginning at 10 a.m. Labarge, who has taught at both Carleton and the University of Ottawa, has written eight books on mediaeval history - most recently, Women in Medieval Life - and prepared a report for the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, entitled "The Cultural Tradition of Canadian Women, the Historical Background". She is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. ù Cathleen Morawetz, professor of mathematics at New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. She will receive a Doctor of Mathematics degree. Morawetz will give the convocation address for graduating students in the faculties of engineering, environmental studies, mathematics and sciences, plus the independent studies program, which begins at 2 p.m. Morawetz, an expert in applications of partial differential equations, was made director of the Courant Institute in 1984 - the first woman in the United States to head a mathematics institute. She has twice been a Guggenheim Fellow and was presented with the Lester R. Ford Award of the Mathematical Association of America for her 1979 article on non-linear conservation equations. ù Jean Pigott, recently chairperson of the National Capital Commission in Ottawa. She will receive a Doctor of Laws degree at the afternoon session of convocation. Pigott, a former federal politician, was the ninth chairman of the NCC and the first woman appointed to the position. She was instrumental in broadening the mandate of the NCC from enhancing the capital as the symbol of Canadian nationhood to include as well Canada's social and cultural components. She has been a member of the advisory Pragma Council for UW's school of urban and regional planning. The three UW professors to be granted Professor Emeritus titles are Dr. Janos AczŽl, a pure mathematician with hundreds of research papers to his credit; Dr. William Forbes, the founding director of the gerontology program, a prolific researcher on aging, and a former dean of mathematics; and Dr. Peter Nash, a former dean of environmental studies and a wide- ranging researcher in applied geography, housing and planning. Dr. Norman Ashton, the founding chair of the department of kinesiology and the developer of the well-known 10BX fitness program for women, will be awarded the title "Honorary Member of the University."

67. Www.information.uwaterloo.ca/Gazette/1993/Gazette,%20October%2020,%201993/Convoc
history. ù cathleen morawetz, professor of mathematics at New YorkUniversity's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. She
http://www.information.uwaterloo.ca/Gazette/1993/Gazette, October 20, 1993/Convo
Gold medals will be presented to UW's top graduate students of the year at Saturday's convocation ceremony. The Alumni Gold Medals for the top master's student and the top PhD student are an annual feature of the fall convocation. Gold medals for six graduating students from undergraduate programs are presented at the spring convocation each year. This year's winners: ù Carl Andrew Mendoza, who received a PhD in earth sciences last spring after writing a thesis that received the W. B. Pearson Award for outstanding doctoral work in that department. When he received his MSc from UW in 1989, he was that year's winner of the Governor-General's Gold Medal at the master's level. Mendoza is now teaching in the geology department at the University of Alberta. He is not expected to be at convocation to receive his new medal in person. ù Georgina Grimshaw, whose MA in psychology was received last spring. She is now a PhD student in the same department, and will be attending Saturday's ceremony. Arts and applied health sciences degrees will be presented at the morning session of convocation, beginning at 10 a.m. The afternoon session, which begins at 2:00, will see degrees presented in engineering, environmental studies, independent studies, mathematics and science. Four retired faculty members are being specially honoured on Saturday - three with the title of "professor emeritus" and one as "honorary member of the university". The professors being honoured: ù Dr. Janos AczŽl, a pure mathematician with hundreds of research papers to his credit; ù Dr. William Forbes, the founding director of the gerontology program, a prolific researcher on aging, and a former dean of mathematics; ù Dr. Peter Nash, a former dean of environmental studies and a wide-ranging researcher in applied geography, housing and planning. ù Dr. Norman Ashton, the founding chair of the department of kinesiology and the developer of the well- known 10BX fitness program for women, who will be awarded the title "Honorary Member of the University". Also on Saturday, UW will give honorary degrees to a leader in distance education, a pioneering mathematician, a women's issues historian, and the former chairman of the National Capital Commission. The four honorary degree recipients: ù John Daniel, vice-chancellor of The Open University in Britain (and formerly president of Laurentian University of Sudbury). He will receive a Doctor of Laws degree. Daniel will deliver the convocation address at the morning ceremony. ù Margaret Wade Labarge, an adjunct professor of history at Carleton University in Ottawa, who will also receive a Doctor of Laws degree at the morning session. Labarge, who has taught at both Carleton and the University of Ottawa, has written eight books on mediaeval history. ù Cathleen Morawetz, professor of mathematics at New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. She will receive a Doctor of Mathematics degree and will give the convocation address at the afternoon ses sion. Morawetz, an expert in applications of partial differential equations, was made director of the Courant Institute in 1984 - becoming the first woman in the United States to head a mathematics institute. ù Jean Pigott, recently chairperson of the National Capital Commission in Ottawa. She will receive a Doctor of Laws degree at the afternoon session of convocation. Pigott, a former federal politician, was instrumental in broadening the mandate of the NCC from enhancing the capital as the symbol of Canadian nationhood to include as well Canada's social and cultural components. She has been a member of the advisory Pragma Council for UW's school of urban and regional planning.

68. ×ÊÐÖ - Êïæåôïåæ äíó ÷êðöêÿêìâ
American Mathematical Society eMATH e-MATH cathleen morawetz Awarded National Medalof Science Former American Mathematical Society President cathleen Synge
http://www.biophys.msu.ru/scripts/trans.pl/DEF/cyrillic/bioph/linksf.htm
Select Russian encoding:
"THE" Ion channel Web page
ionchann "THE" ION CHANNEL WEB PAGE This page was started August 28, 1996 at the Department of Physiology of Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center by Alan Neely. This is an ambitious attempt to create a resource page for the ion-channel community and serves as a gateway to all the resources containing relevant information on ion channels. ( Last update: 12-10-98). What follows is the result of a preliminary web search using multiple search engines of ion channel and then selecting a few of the most ...
http://phy025.lubb.ttuhsc.edu/Neely/ionchann.htm 3-D Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy
3-D Confocal Microscopy Home Page Currently Featured Sections: Making Animations for the Web Links to Sites with Confocal Images/Animations Lance Ladic, Ph.D. ( ladic@cs.ubc.ca ) Dept. of Physiology, University of B.C. Vancouver, B.C., Canada These pages are part of the ImagerWeb Dept. of Computer Science, UBC What's New What's New Latest: Spring 1997 Until I have time to sit down and re-structure these Web pages (planned for mid-/late summer 1997) I will add any new packages I may come across to the Softw...
http://www.cs.ubc.ca/spider/ladic/confocal.html

69. Centennial Celebration
cathleen Synge morawetz (1010 am) Bert Vogelstein (1030) (break) George E.Andrews (1110 am) Freeman J. Dyson (1130 am). Audience Q A (1200 noon).
http://www.math.upenn.edu/100/celebration.html
Centennial Celebration : October 30, 1999 The morning and afternoon sessions are free and open to the public.
(How to get here)
Morning Session: 200 College Hall, 10:00 am - 12:30 pm
  • Welcome, featuring remarks by SAS Dean Sam Preston (10:00 am)
  • Panel Discussion (10:10 am - 12:30 pm) Mathematics and Science at the turn of the 21 st Century:
    their promise, problems, and interconnections.

    A discussion featuring remarks by our four panelists followed by a period of audience questions and answers. Cathleen Synge Morawetz (10:10 am)
    Bert Vogelstein
    (break)
    George E. Andrews (11:10 am)
    Freeman J. Dyson (11:30 am) (12:00 noon)
Lunch Break 12:30 pm - 3:00 pm Afternoon Session: 200 College Hall, 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
  • Award Ceremony featuring remarks by Penn President Judith Rodin (3:00 pm)
    Presentation of University of Pennsylvania Medals for Distinguished Achievement to Professors Dyson and Morawetz
    Presentation of Department of Mathematics Centennial Medals to Professors Andrews, Dyson, Morawetz, and Vogelstein.
  • Penn Glee Club (3:30 pm)
  • Plenary Address (4:00 pm) Gravity is Cool: or, Why our Universe is Hospitable to Life

70. Biography-center - Letter M
htm; morawetz, cathleen www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/morawetz.htm;Morazzone, www.getty.edu/art/collections/bio/a8201.html; Morbidelli
http://www.biography-center.com/m.html
Visit a
random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish
M
749 biographies

71. Rutgers Math Colloquium
October 25, Christian Kassel, CNRS Université Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, ChuckWeibel, Recent developments on Artin's braid groups. November 1, cathleen morawetz
http://www.math.rutgers.edu/seminars/archive/colloqf02.html
Rutgers Mathematics Department Colloquium
Unless otherwise noted, mathematics department colloquia take place on Friday afternoons in Hill Center 705 , Busch Campus. Here are a map and driving directions . If you need information on public transportation, you may want to check the New Jersey Transit page. Unfortunately, cancellations do occur from time to time. Feel free to call our department (732)-445-3921 before embarking on your journey. Autumn 2002 Schedule
Date Rutgers Faculty Hosts Colloquium Lecture Title September 6
First Friday of Semester No Colloquium (Rosh Hashanah) September 13 Department Reception No Colloquium (Department Reception) September 20 Hans Lindblad , UCSD A. Shadi Tahvildar-Zadeh The motion of the free surface of a liquid September 27 Alex Furman , University of Illinois at Chicago Simon Thomas Gregory Cherlin Orbit structures of ergodic group actions October 4, Haim Brezis Rutgers Universit y Joel Lebowitz Topology and Sobolev space October 11 Igor Kriz , University of Michigan Yi-Zhi Huang Conformal field theory and elliptic cohomology October 18 Richard Stanley , MIT Jeff Kahn Lewis Lectures III: Gromov-Witten invariants and graphical degree sequences October 25 Christian Kassel , CNRS - Universit Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg

72. Publications Of YanYan Li
with boundary (with L. Nirenberg), dedicated to cathleen morawetz on the occasionof her 77th birthday, Methods and Applications of Analysis 7 (2000), 489494.
http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~yyli/published.html
Publications of YanYan Li
typos Degree theory for second order nonlinear elliptic operators and its applications, Comm. in PDE 14 (1989), 1541-1578. 2. Scattering by a potential using hyperbolic methods (with A. Bayliss and C.S. Morawetz), Mathematics of Computation 52 (1989), 321-338. 3. Existence of many positive solutions of semilinear elliptic equations on annulus, J. Differential Equations 83 (1990), 348-367. 4. Nonautonomous nonlinear scalar field equations, Indiana Univ. Math. J. 39 (1990), 283-301. 5. Some existence results of fully nonlinear elliptic equations of Monge-Ampere type, Comm. Pure Appl. Math. 43 (1990), 233-271. 8. Interior gradient estimates for solutions of certain fully nonlinear elliptic equations, J. of Differential Equations 90 (1991), 172-185. 9. On uniformly rotating stars, Arch. Rat. Mech. Anal. 115 (1991), 367-393. 10. Nonexistence of axially symmetric, stationary solution of Einstein Vacuum Equation with disconnected symmetric event horizon (with G. Tian), Manuscripta Mathematica 73 (1991), 83-89. 11. Existence of infinitely many critical values of some nonsymmetric functionals, J. Differential Equations 95 (1992), 140-153.

73. CVGMT: Links
Problems in Image Processing. People. Frank Morgan cathleen S. morawetz MaurizioPaolini Thierry De Pauw. Events. Math Software. Geomview Superficie CCF System.
http://cvgmt.sns.it/Links.html

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74. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: News Archive
Medal of Science winners included Sigma Xi members Bruce Ames, Janet Rowley, DonAnderson, John Bahcall, John Cahn, cathleen morawetz, Eli Ruckenstein and
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/news/archive.25.shtml
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Ten Sigma Xi Members Win National Science and Technology Medals
Eight Sigma Xi members were awarded the 1998 National Medal of Science and two received the National Medal of Technology in ceremonies at the White House in December. The National Medal of Science honors outstanding contributions to knowledge in the physical, biological, mathematical or engineering sciences. The National Medal of Technology recognizes American innovators whose work has made profound and lasting contributions to the nation's economy and quality of life. Medal of Science winners included Sigma Xi members Bruce Ames, Janet Rowley, Don Anderson, John Bahcall, John Cahn, Cathleen Morawetz, Eli Ruckenstein and George Whitesides. Sigma Xi members Ernest Jaworski and Stephen Rogers received the National Medal of Technology. Ames is director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences at the University of California at Berkeley. He developed the Ames Test, which allows scientists to test chemicals to see whether they cause mutations in bacteria and perhaps cancer in humans. Rowley, of the University of Chicago, helped discover changes to chromosomes caused by cancer and chemotherapy. She was the recipient of Sigma Xi's 1989 William Procter Prize for Scientific Achievement.

75. Www.virginia.edu/insideuva/textonlyarchive/92-03-01/11.txt
cathleen morawetz, NYU. Newcomb S. Mtg. Rm. 330 pm Free. (Art) March 5. TransonicFlow Nonlinear Mixed Equations. cathleen morawetz, NYU. OLS 009.
http://www.virginia.edu/insideuva/textonlyarchive/92-03-01/11.txt

76. Lenore Blum's IMAGES Page
With cathleen in Fez (1995). cathleen morawetz in Fez (1995). Escuela Campo Alegre(Junior High School) Reunion (2001) More ReunionPhotos. Aaron_Alex (2001).
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~lblum/IMAGES/Images.html
xxx IMAGES
Lenore Blum

Distinguished Career Professor of Computer Science
PhD (M.I.T.)
x XXX Xxxx
XXXX
xx xxxx
Warren S. McCulloch
xxx X X X XX XX Women@SCS xxx xxx
Blum Family in the News
xxx Photos by: Darrell Sapp, Pittsburgh Post-Gazett xxx xxx xxx Great Grandma Tina Grand Ole Flag
Newton Center
MIT 1968
Berkeley (Zadehs) 1969
Berkeley (Tilden) Berkeley Euclid Boston Hong Kong (CityU) 1998 MIT 1985 Berkeley With Cathleen in Fez Cathleen Morawetz in Fez Escuela Campo Alegre (Junior High School) Reunion
More ReunionPhotos With Bethuel at Macalester College More Graduation Photos With Garrison Keillor at Macalester (2002) At Pinnacle in Saratoga Springs with Matt, Ann and NicK (2002) More Pinnacle Photos XXX Horse and Rider (Early Tang Dynasty) Temptation II ( Valentin Lustig Le Voyage III (Marta Moreu) Mesolite (Collection/Photo by Steve Smale Bob Marley ( Bethuel Mbugua Varascite (Collection/Photo by Steve Smale

77. Searching For Mathematicians On The Web
plane Dr. Sarah (1969) Turning basketballs into footballs Sonya Kovalevsky (1850-1891)Kovalevsky top cathleen morawetz (1923-) Shock waves Frank Morgan
http://www.mathsci.appstate.edu/~sjg/class/1010/bios.html
Choose a partner and then pick one of the following mathematicians by turning in a piece of paper with you and your partner's name and the name of the mathematician: (first come-first served). Prepare a 15 minute presentation (Nov 16, 18 or 23rd) using the presentation checklist , and paper (due Nov 23rd at 6pm) using the paper checklist . There will be no revisions on this paper, so I strongly encourage you to bring rough drafts into office hours to discuss your paper with me, since this will count as 2 labs. I'll give you material to help start on the math. You are expected to research the life and work via books and the web (see below). Maria Agnesi (1718-1799) The witch of Agnesi
David Blackwell (1919-) Game Theory
Euler (1707-1783) 2^n+1 is not always prime when n is a power of 2.
Euclid (~325 BC-265 BC) Euclid's Postulates for Euclidean Geometry
Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855) Non-Euclidean Geometry
Sophie Germain (1776-1831) Fermat's Last Theorem and Sophie Germain primes
Carolyn Gordon - Can you hear the shape of a drum?

78. CanHistory - Canadian History In A Fun And Easy Format
morawetz, cathleen Synge Mathematical applications of partial differential equations,1st female director of a major research math institute Morley, Lawrence
http://www.canhistory.netfirms.com/custom pages/page1016.html

79. BACase Summer & Fall 1998
SATURDAY, August 22, 1100 cathleen Synge morawetz, Courant Institute, New YorkUniversity, will present an EMMY NOETHER LECTURE with title Variations on
http://web.math.fsu.edu/~smith/FacultyPages/caseSummerFall1998.html
Professor Bettye Anne Case
Special Summer/Fall 1998 (1) Coordinating special section activities related to women in mathematics for the INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF MATHEMATICIANS, Berlin, Germany, August 18 - 27, 1998. (See Circular Letter #24 All who are interested in the participation of women in the study of mathematics and in the community of mathematicians are invited to the following activities: FRIDAY, August 21 - at 19:30: PANEL DISCUSSION: After recognition of the involvement of women from many countries as ICM participants, women speakers from several countries will discuss "Events and policies: Effects on women in mathematics". The panel is being organized by women from the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM), the European Women in Mathematics (EWM) and the Committee on Women and Mathematics of the European Mathematical Society, represented by a committee consisting of Bhama Srinivasan (chair; Chicago, USA), Bettye Anne Case (Tallahassee, USA), and Christine Bessenrodt (Magdeburg, Germany). The organizers have received planning advice from women in several additional countries. They envision that each speaker will talk about how certain events or policies in her country have affected women in mathematics. at 21:15: A film entitled "Women and mathematics across cultures" will be shown which briefly introduces EWM, shows some statistics, and allows four woman mathematicians to share their personal experiences about the impact of cultural differences on the status of women in the profession. The film was directed by Marjatta Naatanen (Helsinki, Finland).

80. BOOK REVIEW
Some of the women making up the study are so famous that everybody will be familiarwith their names, for example cathleen morawetz and Mary Ellen Rudin.
http://www.pzweifel.com/music/murray_book_review.htm
BOOK REVIEW WOMEN BECOMING MATHEMATICIANS by Margaret A.M. Murray The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2000. 277 pages. $29.95 Margaret Murray is Associate Professor of Mathematics at Virginia Tech. Her original field of research was harmonic analysis; in fact she has co-authored a book entitled Clifford Algebras and Dirac Analysis in Harmonic Analysis (by no means her only publication in pure mathematics). She has her Ph.D. from Yale University, so one sees that she has excellent credentials in mathematics. This book proves that she has plenty of credentials in the humanities as well, not only because it so beautifully and clearly written but also because it is so carefully and painstakingly researched The subject matter is a sociological-historical study of 36 women mathematicians who received their Ph.D.'s between the years 1940 and 1959; Murray studies their lives and careers in an attempt to answer two basic questions, formulated in her Preface: "How then do women become mathematicians?" And "How do they find satisfying work and earn respect and remuneration in a field that is largely defined and dominated by men?" Other, subsidiary, questions are raised and studied, for example problems of "Interweaving a Career and a Life" (read "marriage and child-rearing"), Chapter 6; "Family backgrounds and Early Influences" (how do girls and young women cope with the societal/familial attitudes that mathematics is not "women's work?") Chapter 3; and "Dimensions of Personal and Professional Success" (was academic research abandoned for teaching and/or industry as a result of subtleor not-so-subtlepressure from the male establishment?) Chapter 8.

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