first meeting: may 11, 1940 – colgate university meetings and...first meeting: may 11, 1940 –...
TRANSCRIPT
Meetings 1940 – Present
First Meeting: May 11, 1940 – Colgate University
Papers Presented:
A Plan for Freshman Mathematics, T. F. Cope, Queens College (CUNY)
An Application of Analytic Geometry to Cryptography, R. E. Huston, RPI
Errors in American College Mathematics Texts, A. B. Brown, Queens College
Jacobian Circles of the Biquadratic, B. C. Patterson, Hamilton College
Complex Roots of a Polynomial Equation, H. N. Gehman, University of Buffalo
Representation of a Class of Functions by Stieltjes Integrals, B. A. Lengyel, RPI
A Locus Associated with the Pascal Line, E. R. Ott, University of Buffalo
The convergence and Summability of Series, R. P. Agnew, Cornell University
Second Meeting: May 3, 1941 – Cornell University
Papers Presented:
The Potential Function in Electro-dynamics, R. E. Street, RPI
A Course on the Significance of Mathematics, H. F. Montague, University of Buffalo
Some Applications of Mathematics to Serial Mapping, E. F. Church, Syracuse University
Report on a Survey of the mathematical Preparations for Defense, E. B. Allen, RPI
An Extension of Hill’s Method in Cryptography, B. W. Jones, Cornell University
Quadrilaterals Inscribed and Circumscribed to Curves of the Third and Second Degree, respectively, with a Common Line of Symmetry, Rev. W. A. Scheier, St. Bonaventure College
Class Interval Assumptions in Frequency Distributions, H. A. DoBell, NYS College for Teachers at Albany
Generating Functions in the Theory of Statistics, J. H. Curtiss, Cornell University
Third Meeting: May 10, 1947 – University of Rochester
Papers Presented:
Electronic Digital Calculators, R. D. O’Niel, Eastman Kodak Company
Absolutely and Completely Monotonic Functions, Harry Pollard, Cornell University
Eccentricity and Slope, Harriet Montague, University at Buffalo
Familiarity and Understanding in Mathematics, S. S. Cairns, Syracuse University
The Present Mathematical Situation and Next Steps in the Teaching of Mathematics,
William Betz, Rochester Public Schools
Fourth Meeting: May 1, 1948 – Union College
Papers Presented:
Auxiliary Tricks which make Mathematical Notions Stick, Rev. B. Kuhn, Siena College
Complex Geometry, B. C. Patterson, Hamilton College
Non-planar Graphs, Bryant Tuckerman, Cornell University
The History of Topics in Analytic Geometry, Vera Sanford, Oneonta State Teachers College
Some Models that are Useful in the Teaching of High School and College Mathematics,
Ruth Stokes, Syracuse University
Oriented Elements in Analytic Geometry, W. J. Bruns, Syracuse University
Monotonic Transformations,
Applied Mathematics, Hillel Poritsky, General Electric Co.
Fifth Meeting: April 30, 1949 – University of Buffalo
Friday Evening Address:
Arithmetical Games and Phyllotaxis, H. S. M. Coxeter, University of Toronto
Papers Presented:
The Excenters of a Hyperbolic Triangle, H. S. M. Coxeter, University of Toronto
The Addition Formulas of Trigonometry, J. F. Randolph, University of Rochester
An Algebraic Algorithm, N. G. Gunderson, University of Rochester
Mathematics in New York State Institutes, I. S. Boak, NYSA&T Institute, Canton
Flying Inertias, E. T. Welmers, Bell Aircraft Corp.
Extra-Sensory Perception, a Problem in the Theory of Confirmation, J. E. Freund, Alfred University
Sixth Meeting: April 22, 1950 – Syracuse University
Papers Presented:
Models and Methods, R. C. Yates, U. S. Military Academy
The Problem of Eight Points, W. B. Carver, Cornell University
Some Educational Problems in New York State, C. V. Newsom, NYS Education Dept.
On Space Frames and Plane Trusses, N. E. Goheen, Syracuse University
Analytic Solutions of Non-linear Differential Equations, R. D. Larsson, Clarkson College of Technology
Difference and Differential Equations in Probability Theory, Murray Rosenblatt, Cornell University
The Tutorial system at the University of Buffalo, Harriet Montague, University of Buffalo
Seventh Meeting: May 5, 1951 – Hamilton College
Papers Presented:
A Doubly Oscillating Pendulum, A. K. Waltz, Clarkson College of Technology
The Bivariate Normal Distribution and Applications, J. E. Freund, Alfred University
Extremal Problems Treated by Elementary Methods, W. H. Fuchs, Cornell University
Report of the Committee on the Relations of Secondary School and College Mathematics, M. F. Rosskopf (Chair), Syracuse University
A Theorem in Measure Theory and Applications to Statistics, Esther Seiden, University of Buffalo
Some Classes of Power Series, Frederick Bagemihl, University of Rochester
Some Inequalities in Differential Geometry, Charles Loewner, Syracuse University
The Sum of a Generalized harmonic Series and Some Related Results, M. R. Spiegel, RPI
Eighth Meeting: May 10, 1952 – Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Papers Presented:
Parallel Plate Optics, F. D. Parker, St. Lawrence University
The Problem Section of the Monthly, H. W. Eves, Champlain College, SUNY
High Speed computing and its Effects on Teaching, William Durfee, National Bureau of Standards
A Freshman Looks at Mathematics, W. B. Pitt, University of Rochester student
A Mean Value Theorem and Inequalities, K. A. Bush, Champlain College, SUNY
Functions of Subdivisions and Their Use in Advanced Undergraduate Mathematics, Dorothy Bernstein, University of Rochester
The Leibniz Characteristic Triangle, Frances Baker, Vassar College
Ninth Meeting: May 9, 1953 – United States Military Academy
Papers Presented:
The Teaching of Mathematics at West Point, W. W. Bessell, U. S. Military Academy
Color and Mathematics, Nura Turner, SUNY College for Teachers at Albany
The Conigraph, E. I. Gale, Norland, Ontario
Conic Sections and Other Curves on the Screen and in Space, Ruth Stokes, Syracuse University
The Mangler Transformation, Irwin Stoner, Bell Aircraft Corp.
Teaching a Course in the History of Elementary Mathematics, Howard Eves, Champlain College, SUNY
Tenth Meeting: May 1, 1954 – NYS College for Teachers at Albany
Papers Presented:
A Program for the Preparation of Secondary School Teachers of Mathematics, R. A. Beaver, NYS College for Teachers at Albany
Potential of a Charged Cylinder Between Two Parallel Grounded Plates, Hillel Poritsky, General Electric Co.
Statistics and Engineering, Roger Lessard, Ecole Polytechnique, Montreal
The 1953 Summer Conference in Collegiate Mathematics, Ethel Callahan, Hartwick College
Representations of Compact Lie Groups, A. J. Coleman, University of Toronto
Mathematics as Taught to Engineers by Dr. Steinmetz, P. L. Alger, General Electric Co.
A Non-linear Problem from Nuclear Reactor Theory, A. H. Fox, Union College
Modern Differential Geometry and its Application to Relativity, Valdemars Punga, RPI
Eleventh Meeting: May 14, 1955 – University of Buffalo
Papers Presented:
The Need of Mathematics in Business Research, W. L. Murdock, General Electric Co.
Teaching Computing Without a Computer, J. F. Randolph, University of Rochester
Teaching Computing With a Computer, J. B. Rosser, Cornell University
Rigor in Undergraduate Mathematics, F. D. Parker, Clarkson College of Technology
The Problem of a Blind Student of Mathematics, Irving Bentsen, University of Rochester
Hyperbolic Triangles, H. S. M. Coxeter, University of Toronto
Twelfth Meeting: April 28, 1956 – Alfred University
Invited Addresses:
Mathematics in Industry, T. C. Fry, Bell Telephone Laboratories
Mathematics for Statisticians, J. E. Freund, Virginia Polytechnic Institute
Papers Presented:
A Fundamental Limit and its Applications, N. J. Pascual, Siena College
Some Special Determinants, F. R. Olson, University of Buffalo
False Solutions in Elementary Extremum Problems, C. S. Ogilvy, Hamilton College
Thirteenth Meeting: May 4, 1957 – Skidmore College
Invited Addresses:
The College Entrance Examination Board’s Advanced Placement Program, C. R. Keller, CEEB and Department of History, Williams College
The Mathematics of “Operations Research”, A. W. Jones, Bell Telephone Laboratories
Papers Presented:
A Proof of the Isoperimetric Property of the Circle, A. G. Davis, Clarkson College of Technology
The Matrix Equation X2 = I over a Finite Field, J. H. Hodges, University of Buffalo
Vector Methods in Elementary Analytic Geometry, Victors Linis, University of Ottowa
Strategy and Tactics in Mathematics, R. B. Davis, Syracuse University
Fourteenth Meeting: May 10, 1958 – University of Montreal
Invited Addresses:
The Canadian Mathematical Congress, R. L. Jeffery, Queen’s University
Training Teachers of Mathematics, A. Wittenberg, Laval University
Papers Presented:
The Mathematical Analysis of the English Verb Phrase, Joachim Lambek, McGill University
The Logic of Algebra and the Algebra of Logic, L. O. Kattsoff, Harpur College
Convex Representation of Planar Graphs, W. T. Tutte, University of Toronto
The Spherical Image, C. S. Ogilvy, Hamilton College
On the Classical Characterizations of the Existence a.e. of a Derivative for Functions of One Real Variable, A. G. Fadell, University of Buffalo
The Minimax Theorem (Another Simple Proof), J. E. L. Peck, McGill University
Fifteenth Meeting: May 9, 1959 – Hartwick College
Invited Addresses:
Changes in the Certification Climate, R. F. Kille, University of the State of New York
Rings and Modules, R. E. Johnson, Smith College (MAA Visiting Lecturer)
Papers Presented:
Partial Product Calculators, E. I. Gale, Brockville Bible College
The Honors Course in Mathematics at the University of Buffalo, Edith Schneckenburger, University of Buffalo
The NSF In-Service Institute at Oneonta State Teachers College, C. E. Rusch, Oneonta State Teachers College
A Report on the Teaching of Analytic Geometry over Closed Circuit Television, Violet Larney, NYS Teachers College at Albany
Analytical Radon Curves, H. G. Nelfenstein, University of Ottowa
The Characterization of Classes of Orthogonal Polynomials, A. E. Denese, Union College
A Certain Discrete Density Function, Rev. N. A. Hanhauser, Siena College
Polynomials and Functions, L. O. Kattsoff, Harpur College
Sixteenth Meeting: May 7, 1960 – University of Rochester
Papers Presented:
A Problem in Probability, , A. G. Davis, Clarkson College of Technology
Approximately Continuous Functions, A. G. Fadell, University of Buffalo
Lagrange’s Theorem and Stationary Functions, R. J. Pegis, Bausch and Lomb Optical Co.
Methods to Treat Mathematical Problems with Symmetry of Rotation, M. J. Nerzberger, Eastman Kodak Co.
A Useful Course in Geometry for Future High School Teachers, Israel Halperin, Queen’s University
Mathematics in Industrial Research, E. W. Marchand, Eastman Kodak Co.
The Case for a General Education Course in Mathematics, Harriet Montague, University of Buffalo
Teaching Experiences with a High School Supplementary Mathematics Program, G. R. Rising, Greece Olympia High School
A Modification of Birkhoff’s Axioms for High School Geometry, Roland Brossard, Universite de Montreal
Some Elementary Aspects of Integral Geometry, W. R. Baum, Syracuse University
Finite Geometries and the Four Color Problem, W. T. Tutte, University of Toronto
Seventeenth Meeting: April 29, 1961 – Harpur College
Papers Presented:
On Goodman’s Conjecture, N. W. Pownall, Colgate University
A Duality of Maximum-minimum Theory, C. S. Ogilvy, Hamilton College
On Asymmetry in Fields, J. D. Reid, Syracuse University
The CUPM Program for Engineers, R. J. Walker, Cornell University
On Evaluating Certain Real Integrals by Cauchy’s Residue Theorem, O. J. Farrell and B. Ross, Union College
On Iterations with Errors, Peter Frank, Syracuse University
Maximality and Reflexive-symmetric Relations, A. R. Bednarek, University of Buffalo
A Generalization of the Contraction Mapping Theorem and its Numerical Applications, W. C. Rheinboldt, Syracuse University
Eighteenth Meeting: May 5, 1962 – Clarkson College of Technology
Papers Presented:
A Note on Vibrations with Heavy Damping, E. E. Haskins, Clarkson College of Technology
Accessibility in Pair-homogeneous Cut-point Graphs, N. W. Pownall, Colgate University
Analogue of Cauchy’s Formula in non-Archimedean Fields, Victors Linis, University of Ottowa
A Self-determining Sequence Leading to Markov Chains, Alexander Nagel, Bronx High School of Science
An Obvious Theorem with Some Non-obvious Consequences, Norman Miller, Queen’s University
Programmed Instruction in College and High School Mathematics, B. H. Gore, Hamilton College and A. L. Buchman, NYS Education Department
Studies Resulting from the Results of the 1961 High School Mathematics Contest in the Upstate Section of New York, Nura Turner, SUNY College for Teachers at Albany
The Mathematical Enrichment for Secondary School Students at Clarkson College of Technology, R. D. Larsson, Clarkson College of Technology
Nineteenth Meeting: April 23, 1963 – SUNY at Buffalo
Papers Presented:
The Undergraduate Program at the University of Rochester, R. E. Johnson, University of Rochester
The Undergraduate Preparation of Graduate Students, Erik Hemmingsen, Syracuse University
Remarks, R. N. Bing, President of MAA
Five Years as Contest Chairman of the Upper New York State Section, Nura Turner, SUNY College for Teachers at Albany
Some Generalizations of the Cantor-Lebesgue Theorem, T. E. Nott, SUC at Fredonia
Dimension of a Module, R. E. Johnson, University of Rochester
Similar Configurations in Measurable Sets, T. A. Bick, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
On the Dialectical Triad, and Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for a Dialectical Process,
W. A. Small, SUC at Geneseo
On Inscribed Rectangles, N.S. Klamkin, SUNY at Buffalo
Stellating the 24-Cell, B. L. Chilton, SUNY at Buffalo
Twentieth Meeting: May 16, 1964 – State Education Department of the State of New York
Papers Presented:
Recent Developments in N.Y. State Secondary Education, Frank Hawthorne, NYS Education Department
Some Aspects of the Madison Project, R. N. Exner, Syracuse University
The NYS College Proficiency Examination Program, R. A. Beaver, SUNY at Albany
The Algebra of Reflexive Relations, F. D. Parker, SUNY at Buffalo
An Inclusion Theorem for Nordlund Means, P. T. Schaefer, SUNY at Albany
Moments and Cumulants – and Consequences, N. P. Salz, Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory
Accumulated Truncation Errors in Simpson’s Method, C. E. Rhodes, Alfred University
Utterly Integer Valued Entire Functions, D. Sato, University of Saskatchewan at Regina
Neighborly Vertices in a Polyhedron, Victors Linis, University of Ottowa
Twenty-First Meeting: May 15, 1965 – Colgate University
Invited Address:
Methods in the Four Color Problem, O. Ore, Yale University
Papers Presented:
Linear Transformations, Matrices, and Trigonometry, A. R. Amir-Moez, Clarkson College of Technology
Coordinate Free Calculus and the “Invariant” Laplacian, W. Eberlein, University of Rochester
Problems in Associativity and the Embedding of Semigroups into Groups, Dov Tamari, SUNY at Buffalo
The Pre-Graduate Panel of CUPM, L. Gillman, University of Rochester
Non-Unique Solutions of Linear Equations with Non-Singular matrix, R. D. Larrson, Mohawk Valley Community College
Twenty-Second Meeting: May 14, 1966 – St. Bonaventure University
Invited Address:
The General Curriculum in Mathematics for Colleges, A. W. Tucker, Princeton University,
Representing CUPM
Papers Presented:
A Generalization of the Consecutive Non-square Free Integer Problem, C. J. Parry, SUC at Oswego, Undergraduate Papers Contest Winner
Secondary School Mathematics – Present and Future, Frank Hawthorne, NYS Education Department
Finite Calculus, H. A. Still, Queen’s University
Projection Matrices and the Generalized Inverse, J. C. Boot, SUNY at Buffalo
Twenty-Third Meeting: May 20, 1967 – SUNY Plattsburgh
Invited Address:
How to Tell that a Simple Overhand Knot is Really Knotted, E. E. Noise, Harvard University, President of MAA
Papers Presented:
On the Solution of Cantor’s Problem, Andrey Feuerverger, McGill University, Undergraduate Papers Contest Winner
Dimension Theory, D. W. Henderson, Cornell University
Naming the Irreducible Representations of the Symmetric Group, A. J. Coleman, Queen’s University
Duo Rings and a Theorem of Jacobson, H. E. Bell, Union College
Recent CUPM Proposals in Mathematics for Engineers, R. J. Walker, Cornell University
First Fall Meeting: November 4, 1967 – State University College at Buffalo
Papers Presented:
Unit Intervals in Arbitrary Fields, Michael Gemignani, SUNY at Buffalo
Approximation Theory, R. E. Dowds, SUC at Fredonia
Colors and Queens, F. D. Parker, St. Lawrence University
Experimental Work in Elementary and Secondary Mathematics in the USSR, Nura Turner, SUNY at Albany
The Combinatorial Problem of the Counting of Corridors, G. J. van der Maas and A. Thuswaldner, Northern Electric Laboratories, Ottowa
Almost Convergent and Almost Summable Sequences, Paul Schaefer, SUC at Geneseo
Unitary Near-Rings on Generalized Quaternion Groups, C. J. Maxson, SUC at Fredonia
Twenty-Fourth Spring Meeting: May 11, 1968 – Hamilton College
Papers Presented:
Iterated Radicals, C. S. Ogilvy, Hamilton College
Some Characterizations of Near-Fields, C. J. Maxson, SUC at Fredonia
Direct Calculation ofMatrix Functions by Idempotent Matrices, V. Lovass-Nagy and D. L. Powers, Clarkson College of Technology
Do it with Points and Lines, F. Buekenhout, SUNY at Buffalo
The First Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Algebra of Rectangular Matrices , M. F. Smiley, SUNY Albany
Second Fall Meeting: November 9, 1968 – RPI
Papers Presented:
Application of Recurrence Relations to Prove Algebraic Identities, E. T. Frankel, Schenectady, NY
Integer Approximation of Rationals, A. Thuswaldner, Northern Electric Laboratories, Ottowa
Multicoherence in Graphs, D. V. Vittum and C. J. Houghton, SUNY at Binghamton
Things Like the Euler Characteristic in Graphs, D. E. Scheim, Undergraduate, University of Rochester
Preliminary Reports from CUPM Panels, N. W. Pownall, Colgate University and R. D. Larrson, Mohawk Valley Community College
Report on the Upstate New York MAA Contest Section, N. D. Turner, SUNY at Albany
Uniform Convergence on Classes of Subsets, R. C. Shiflett, Wells College
A Note on Nonlinear Models in Two Dimensional Cavitating Flow, K. N. Agrwal and A. C. Smith, University of Windsor
Rotational Gas Flows with Straight and Circular Streamlines, Om Parkash Chanda and A. C. Smith, University of Windsor
Twenty-Fifth Spring Meeting: May 10, 1969 – University of Western Ontario
Papers Presented:
Toward a Geometry from City Streets, A. G. Davis, Clarkson College of Technology
On Lp, 1 < p <1, L. T. Gardner, University of Toronto
Solution of Certain Differential Equations using Dirichlet Series, R. D. Larrson, Mohawk Valley Community College
Toeplitz Basic Sequences in a Locally Convex Metric Space, D. R. Kerr, SUNY at Albany
Bounds on the Magnitude of the Coefficients of the Cyclotomic Polynomials, Sister Marion Beiter, Rosary Hill College
A Note on Multiplicative Functions, A. Somayajulu, Canisius College
Extraction of Homogeneous Parts of a Polynomial Transformation and the Pure Derivative Theorem, S. Gagola, SUNY at Buffalo, Undergraduate Papers Contest Winner
The Second Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Induced and Subduced Representations of Groups, A. J. Coleman, Queen’s University
Third Fall Meeting: November 1, 1969 – Canisius College
Invited Address:
A. B. Willcox, Executive Director, MAA
Papers Presented:
Extensional Determinant Identities, R. G. Van Meter, St. Lawrence University
A Class of Ring Extensions, C. W. Kohls, Syracuse University
The Anti-Center of P-Groups, W. Kappe, SUNY at Binghamton
Completely Adequate Neighborhood Systems, S. O’Reilly, Niagara University
Report on the MAA High School Contest, N. D. Turner, SUNY at Albany
Twenty-Sixth Spring Meeting: May 16, 1970 – University of Rochester
Papers Presented:
Properties of 2-Structures, S. P. Cassens, SUC at Oswego
Numerical Methods and the Calculus, L. Lardy, Syracuse University
The First Digit Problem, R. Raimi, University of Rochester
The Third Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Mathematical Programming, P. Gilbert, Syracuse University
Fourth Fall Meeting: November 7, 1970 - SUNY Oswego
Invited Address:
Topological Methods in Analysis, G. S. Young, University of Rochester
Papers Presented:
Embedding a Partially Ordered Ring in a Division Ring, W. H. Reynolds, SUC at Cortland
Simple Proofs of Elementary Probability Theorems by Use of Indicator Functions, P. Tan, Carleton University
Generalized Generalized Inverses, G. Rabson, Clarkson College of Technology
Twenty-Seventh Spring Meeting: May 8, 1971 – St. Lawrence University
Papers Presented:
Integration by Diagrams, D. S. Martin, SUC at Brockport
A New Direction for Birkhoff’s Problem, R. C. Shiflett, Wells College
Invariance Theorems in Probability, D. R. Beuerman, Queen’s University
Seventeen Wallpaper Samples, D. Paine, Wells College and Cornell University
Informal vs. Formal Mathematics, R. G. Van Meter, St. Lawrence University
The Fourth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Backward, Turn Backward, J. F. Randolph, RIT and University of Rochester
Fifth Fall Meeting: November 6, 1971 – SUNY Geneseo
Papers Presented:
Polar Coordinates Revisited, W. F. Eberlein, University of Rochester
Calculus Without Limits, R. W. Sloan, Alfred University
Metric Spaces for Freshmen, F. Dristy, SUC at Oswego
A New View of the Elementary Teacher, R. E. Heintz, SUC at Buffalo
Morphisms of Subrings of Real Matrix Rings into the Real Quaternions, W. H. Reynolds, SUC at Cortland
Relatively Dense Sets in Groups, G. T. Frey, St. Bonaventure University
Asymptotically Self-Invariant Sets, S. Leela, SUC at Geneseo
The Derivation of Optimally Stable and Accurate 3-Stage, 1-Step, Explicit, Numerical Integration Methods, B. J. Nigro, Niagara County Community College
Twenty-Eighth Spring Meeting: May 13, 1972 – Clarkson College of Technology
Papers Presented:
Standard Questions and Principles of Modern Mathematics, W. E. Hartnett, SUC at Plattsburgh
Unsolvability for Undergraduates, J. McKibben, Skidmore College
Finding Derivatives and Limits Using the Definite Integral Formulas for Arc Length, Peter Lindstrom, Genesee Community College
Texas Style Teaching at the Undergraduate Level, R. Stinebrickner, SUC at Potsdam
Testing Whether a Multinomial Distribution is a Binomial Distribution of Order k, Sister R. Bertell, D’Youville College
Mapping of a Linear 2-Normed Space into a Linear Normed Space, C. Diminnie and A. White, St. Bonaventure University
A Canonical Form of Ideals in Z[t], S. Reyner, SUC at Oswego
Representation of a Group by a Family of Partial Functions on a Set of Subgroups; Residual Properties, W. Reynolds, SUC at Cortland
On the Bounds of p in Fermat’s Last Theorem, G. Guillotte, Massey-Vanier School
The Fifth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Problem of Geometry , W. Eberlein, University of Rochester
Sixth Fall Meeting: November 4, 1972 – Mohawk Valley Community College
Papers Presented:
A Computer Model Useful in Teaching Mathematics, W. E. Hartnett, SUC at Plattsburgh
The Use of Infinitesimals in 18th Century Calculus, S. Regoczei, University of Toronto
A Vector Space Approach to Problems of Statistical Inference, P. Tan, Carleton University
Statistics Without Calculus for the Social Sciences, E. Weissner, LeMoyne College
A Note on Embedding a Partially Ordered Ring in a Division Algebra, W. H. Reynolds, SUC at Cortland
An Example of a Non-Strictly Convex Linear 2-Normed Space, A. White, St. Bonaventure University
Hardy’s Inequality for Lp(1r) Functions, H. P. Heinig, McMaster University
Map Coloring, Fibonacci Sequences, and the Golden Ratio, D. W. Hall, SUNY at Binghamton
A Generalization of Buffon’s Needle Problem, F. A. Hacker, Mohawk Valley Community College
Optimal Mixed Strategies for Allocation GamesI, D. Sankoff, University of Montreal
Twenty-Ninth Spring Meeting: May 12, 1973 – Rosary Hill College
Papers Presented:
The Computer Oriented Calculus Course at Clarkson, G. Rabson, Clarkson College of Technology
Convergence Criteria for Rational Series, J. Kevins, Student, St. Bonaventure University
A Net Characterization of the E-Transformation, J. H. Tsai, SUC at Geneseo
Models of Ordinals, D. S. Martin, SUC at Brockport
A Note on Graphs whose Neighborhoods are n-Cycles, B. L. Chilton, SUC at Fredonia
The Permanent Function of a Symmetric Matrix, E. T. Hoefer, Rosary Hill College
Transformation Semigroups Acting on Totally Ordered Spaces, D. Anson, Alfred University
An Application of Logic, R. G. Van Meter, SUC at Oneonta
The Sixth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Communication Problems in Mathematics , K. May, University of Toronto
Seventh Fall Meeting: November 3, 1973 – Genesee Community College
Invited Addresses:
Interrelations between Combinatorial Designs, T. Storer, SUNY at Buffalo
The Role of the MAA in the Two Year College, G. S. Young, University of Rochester
Papers Presented:
The Development of Perspective in Western Art, D. L. Farnsworth, Eisenhower College
The Class of Integer Identities, R. DeCarli, Rosary Hill College
Construction of Rings on the Cartesian Product of the Integers and an Ideal, N. W. Groman, SUC at Oswego
The Trouble with Statistics, H. A. Still, Queen’s University
Applied Mathematics – An Introduction via Models, R. F. Barnes, SUC at Brockport
Teaching Calculus via Self-paced Instruction: Advantages (many) and Disadvantages (few),
V. H. Reynolds, SUC at Cortland
A New Approach to Leibnitzian Differentials, J. L. Delkin, University of Western Ontario
A Characterization of Noncommutative Quaternion Rings, C. W. Kohls, Syracuse University
APL Graphics for Undergraduate Students, K. Kim, SUC at Brockport
APL in Teaching Numerical Analysis, J. E. McKenna, SUC at Fredonia
Non-Equivalence of the Theorems of Helly and Radon in General Convexity Theory, R. E. Reed, SUC at Oneonta
2-Normed Space and Spaces with Euclidean Triangles, C. Diminnie and A. White, St. Bonaventure University
Thirtieth Spring Meeting: April 27, 1974 Union College
Invited Address:
Recent Trends in Undergraduate Mathematical Programs, N. Pownall, Colgate University
Papers Presented:
Fuzzy Sets Theory, W. E. Hartnett, SUC at Plattsburgh
Mathematical Models – or – Should Mathematics be Just a Set of Classroom Exercises?,
A. C. Green, SUC at Buffalo
Report on the National Conference for Personalized Instruction in Higher Education,
W. H. Reynolds, SUC at Cortland
Elementary Linear Algebra – Polynomial Evaluation of Functions Using Real Matrices,
D. Fama, Auburn Community College
Multi-Structured College Courses in General Education and Calculus, L. Copes, Syracuse University
A Variable Instruction Program for Mathematics, J. A. Voytuk, RPI
Examples of Two-Dimensional Symmetry by the Graphic Artist, M. C. Escher, S. C. Van Orden, Eisenhower College
Fibonacci Bases of Egyptian Fractions, J. McKibben, Skidmore College
Some Reasons to Doubt the Validity of Goldbach’s Conjecture, R. D. Larsson, Schenectady County Community College
A Note on b
k
a
x dx∫ , P. Lindstrom, Genesee Community College
Normality and Relative Density in Groups, G. T. Frey, St. Bonaventure University
Irreducibility of Polynomials over Finite Fields, C. W. Kohls, Syracuse University
The Seventh Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Mathematician as Teacher , A. Denese, SUNY Fredonia
Eighth Fall Meeting: November 2, 1974 St. John Fisher College
Contributed papers on the Theme of Linear Algebra:
Historical Highlights of Linear Algebra in the Last Fifty Years, M. F. Smiley, SUNY at Albany
A First Course in Linear Algebra, L. A. Trivieri, Mohawk Valley Community college and R. J. Wernick, SUC at Cortland
Computational Aspects of Linear Algebra, P. Eberlein, SUNY at Buffalo
Singular Values, C. Davis, University of Toronto
Spectrum Localization of Banach Spaces, Z. Kovarik, McMaster University
Some Applications of Markov Chains to the Social Sciences, C. Nevison, Colgate University
Linear Inequalities: Old and New Methods of Solution, R. E. Reed, SUC at Oneonta
Thirty-First Spring Meeting: April 26, 1975, York University
Papers Presented:
The Effect of an Electronic Programmable Calculator on a First Course in Calculus,
T. N. O’Loughlin, SUC at Cortland
Some Recent Activities from the Two-Year College, P. Lindstrom, Genesee Community College
Can College Students Reason?, L. Copes, Ithaca College
The differential and the Second Derivative Test, D. S. Martin, SUC at Brockport
Games of Chance and Probability: A Historical Anecdote, P. Tan, Carleton University
The Trace, Inverse, and Characteristic Polynomial – A Complete Set, D. Fama, Auburn Community College
Restricting and Inducing on Inner Products of Representations of a Finite Group, G. de B. Robinson, University of Toronto
Distribution of Initial Digits in Tables of Physical Data, N. n. Rice, Queen’s University
From Burali-Forti to Godel: Early Efforts to Axiomatize Set Theory, G. H. Moore, University of Toronto
The Eighth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Topological Dynamics on Surfaces , E. Hemmingsen, Syracuse University
Ninth Fall Meeting: November 1, 1975, SUNY Cortland
Papers Presented:
Transition Matrices, D. Fama, Cayuga County Community College
Differential Algebra and Asymptotic Expansions, W. Strodt, St. Lawrence University
Retracts of Cantor Spaces, C. Kohls, Syracuse University
Mortgages and Recurrence Relations, F. A. Hacker, Mohawk Valley Community College
Mathematics Education or Vice-Versa, L. Copes, Ithaca College
Applications of Graph Theory and Other Mathematical Models, A. Green, SUC at Buffalo
A Combinatorial Property of 2x2 Matrices, H. E. Bell, Brock University
Instructional Television in College Calculus Courses, Sister J. F. Gilman, Niagara University
Meaning and Precision in Geometry, D. W. Henderson, Cornell University
The Mordell-Weil Theorem, T. W. Lamm, Cornell University
Thirty-Second Spring Meeting: May 1, 1976, College of St. Rose
Papers Presented:
Mathematical Magic, E. T. Frankel, Schenectady, NY
Math Anxiety, Jean Smith, Middlesex CC, Middlesex. CT
Four-Dimensional Division Algebras, C. W. Kohls, Syracuse University
Are Algebraic Expressions just Infix Polish?, Margaret Brown, Skidmore College
Fuzzy Algebra, Jay Delkin, University of Western Ontario
Characterization of a Certain Binary Operation, Donald Palmer, Student, RIT
A Pre-Categorical Look at Sets, Relations, and Functions, Joseph Bodenrader and William Hartnett, SUC at Plattsburgh
A Unifying Proof in Plane Synthetic Geometry, David Farnsworth, Eisenhower College
The Pearl A Metaphor in Educational Mathematics, Larry Copes, Ithaca College
Linear Algebraic Groups Acting with Zariski Open Orbits on a Hypersurface Z(P),
F. J. Servedio, McMaster University
The Ninth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Some Topics in Semigroups of Continuous Functions , K. Magill, SUNY at Buffalo
Tenth Fall Meeting: November 6, 1976, Broome Community College
Invited Address:
Relationship between the Applications of Mathematics and Teaching of Mathematics, H. O. Pollack, Bell Laoratories, President of MAA
Papers Presented:
Boolean Algebra vs. Linear Algebra, Jack Graver, Syracuse University
Verbing Mathematical Nouns: A Case Study of Educational Tensions, Larry Copes, Ithaca College
Some Cantor Sets and Cantor Functions, Judith Palagallo, Hartwick College
Octets of Vectors and their Applications, Mou-Ta Chen, SUC at Brockport
Convolution Transforms on Rn, J. V. Peters, St. Bonaventure University
A Theorem on Bernoulli Numbers of Order k, D. O. McKay, University of Western Ontario
Canonical Reducible Cubic Forms in 3n ≥ Variables, Frank Servedio, McMaster University
Umbral Methods and Alternating Series, A. P. Guinand, Trent University
π: Arc length or Area?, J. F. Smith, LeMoyne College
Report and Results of the Workshop on the Teaching of Statistics, R. F. Barnes, SUC at Brockport
Thirty-Third Spring Meeting: May 7, 1977, State University College at Buffalo
Papers Presented:
Linear Algebra in Undergraduate Statistics, Harold Still, Queen’s University
Forms with 0-Orthogonal Lie Algebras, Frank Servedio, McMaster University
A Computer Lab in Probability, R. F. Barnes, SUC at Brockport
Coefficients of the Cyclotomic PolynomialFqpr(X), Sister M. Beiter, Daemen College
On the Classification of Critical Points of Real Valued Functions of Several Variables,
T. S. Bolis, SUC at Oneonta
A Structure Theorem for Partial Isometries, James Guyker, SUC at Buffalo
Making Meaning about Making Meaning: A Dialogue, Larry Copes, Ithaca College and David Pimm, Cornell University
An Elementary Example of Constructive versus Non-Constructive Proofs, Northrup Fowler, Hamilton College
The Tenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Mathematical Modeling: Examples and Course Materials , W. Lucas, Cornell University
Eleventh Fall Meeting: October 28-29, 1977 SUNY Plattsburgh
Friday Banquet Address:
From the USSR to the USA – Two Worlds of Mathematics, Boris Korenblum, SUNY at Albany
Papers Presented:
The Mathematical Sciences:New Packages – New Careers, C. F. A. Beaumont, University of Waterloo
Graph Theory and Combinatorics Applied to the Macroeconomy of Several Countries, Anton Kotzig, Universite de Montreal
Group Rings and their Automorphisms, D. C. Lantz, Colgate University
Computational Graphics as a Teaching Aid, David Schawe, SUC at Plattsburgh
Determination of all Four Digit Kapreker Constants, G. D. Prichett, Hamilton College
Generalization of Helmholtz’s Harmonic Model, Norbert Oldani, Mohawk Valley Community College
Application of Catastrophe Theory, A. C. Green, SUNY at Buffalo
The Impact of the USA Mathematical Olympiad on the Seaway Section, Nura Turner, SUNY at Albany
The Resultant Iteration for Determining the Stability of a Polynomial, J. L. Howland, University of Ottowa
Opportunities for Applications of Mathematics to Biology and Medicine, J. M. Reiner, Albany Medical College
Thirty-Fourth Spring Meeting: May 5-6, 1978, Brock University
Friday Banquet Address:
Sex Differences in Mathematics: What not to do about Them, Edith Luchins, RPI
Invited Address:
There Were Giants…, R. C. Buck, University of Wisconsin
Papers Presented:
General Implicit and Explicit Solutions for Bernoulli Type Differential Equations, J. P. Rivet, College Militaire Royal de Saint Jean
Discipline Oriented Problems and Individualized Sets of Data for Service Courses in Mathematics, E. R. Muller, Brock University
Harmonic Faber Polynomials, E. T. Hoefer, RIT
Visualizing the Derivative in Elementary Calculus, R. C. Williams, Alfred University
The Algebraic Structure of Ethical Language, W. J. Rapaport, SUC at Fredonia
Locating Objects from Satellite, Constance Elson, Ithaca College
The Smallest n for which an n-Square Theorem is Valid in Certain Fields, C. W. Kohls, Syracuse University
The Eleventh Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Our Future in Mathematics , G. Young, University of Rochester
Twelfth Fall Meeting: November 10-11, 1978 - University of Rochester
Friday Banquet Address:
Mathematical Anxiety: Real or Imaginary? A Proposal for Treatment, Sanford Segal, University of Rochester
Invited Address:
Combinatorial Sequence Problems, David P. Roselle, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Secretary of the MAA
Papers Presented:
The Unimodular Row Problem, Michael Barr, McGill University
Alternative Models in Rail Track Scheduling, Eric Muller, Brock University
The Orhogonal Least Square Line: 1878-1978, David Farnsworth, Eisenhower College and Steven Suddaby, Bureau of Labor Statistics
The Two-Year-College Mathematics Journal – the Past, the Present, and the Future, Peter A. Lindstrom, Genesee Community College
The Classical, Bayesian, and Structural Approaches to Statistical Inference, Peter Tan, Carleton University
Another Approach to Teaching Remedial Algebra to College Students, Larry Copes, Ithaca College
On Distinguished Subspaces of Summability Domains, S. C. Chang, Brock University
A Teaching Model for Systems of Differential Equations, Larry Knop, Hamilton College
Thirty-Fifth Spring Meeting: May 4-5, 1979 - SUNY Oneonta
Friday Banquet Address:
Some Mathematical Morsels, Ross Honsberger, University of Waterloo
Invited Address:
Modules in Applied Mathematics: Some Examples and Sources for Materials, Christopher Nevison, Colgate University, Representative of UMAP
Papers Presented:
The Optimal Assignment Problem: An Application of Elementary Mathematics to Economics,
W. H. Reynolds, SUC at Cortland
A Model of Population Diffusion, A. C. Green, SUC at Buffalo
Optimal Capital Accumulation in a One Sector Economy, B. L. Warren, SUNY at Binghamton
Coexistence of Species Competing for Shared Resources, C. W. Kohls, Syracuse University
A Heine-Borel Theorem is Equivalent to a Parallel Postulate, R. B. Killgrove, SUC at Geneseo
New York State’s New Curriculum for High School Mathematics and the College Bound Student, R. Escobales, Canisius Gollege
A Cute Linear Algebra Proof of the Four Square Theorem, C. Small, Queen’s University
Testing: A New Frontier for Consumers, R. D. Larsson, Schenectady County Community College
The Twelfth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Relational Structures and Theoretical Computer Science , A. Bednarek, University of Florida
Thirteenth Fall Meeting: October 26-27, 1979 - SUNY Albany
Friday Banquet Address:
Sex Differences in Math Aptitudes, Malcolm Sherman, SUNY at Albany
Papers Presented:
The Spectral Theorem and the Jordan Form for Applied Linear Algebra, M. F. Smiley, SUNY at Albany
The Characterization of the Semigroup of Matrix Units, Bernard Gelbaum, SUNY at Buffalo
A First Course in Computing, Robert Ellison, Hamilton College
Crux Mathematicorum, F. G. B. Maskell, Algonquin College
Graphing Analytic Functions(A Geometric Point of View), E. T. Hoefer, RIT
Modules Used in Calculus with Computers Course, Sarah Brooks, Mohawk Valley Community College
Partitions, Partial Fractions, and Characteristic Polynomials, Lindsay N. Childs, SUNY at Albany
Thirty-Sixth Spring Meeting: May 2-3, 1980 - Herkimer Community College
Friday Banquet Address:
Mathematics as an Objective Science, Nicolas Goodman, SUNY at Buffalo
Papers Presented:
Application of Bayesian Techniques to Reliability Demonstration: Estimation and Updating of the Distribution, T. S. Bolis, SUC at Oneonta
A Generating Property of Pythagorean Triples, P. J. Arpaia, St. John Fisher College
There are No Correct Answers in the Real World: An Illustration of Modeling as a Process, R. H. Wright, LeMoyne College
When is a Rational Quaternion Algebra a Division Algebra?, C. W. Kohls, Syracuse University
A Simple probability Model for the Reliability of a Jury Trial, R. C. Williams, Alfred University
Mathematics and Art, J. R. Kolod, College of Saint Rose
The Thirteenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
My Graph , H. Coxeter, University of Toronto
Fourteenth Fall Meeting: November 7-8, 1980 – Daemen College
Papers Presented:
Sharks in the Mediterranean during WWI, Arhtur Deacon, Syracuse University
Actuarial Sciences in the College Mathematics Department, Bette Warren, SUNY at Binghamton
Generalized Bounded Variation, Michael Schramm, Syracuse University
Linear Algebra Made Difficult, Paul Halmos, Indiana University
Constructive Trigonometry, Shirley Stanlen, Schenectady County Community College and Eugene Mozier, La Salle Institute
A Mean Value Theorem in Higher Dimensions, Richard O’Neil, SUNY at Albany
A Psychology of Mathematical Problem Solving, Stephen West, SUC at Geneseo
The Mathematics of Personnel Allocation: The Vices of Linearity, John Mayberry, Brock University
Casino Gambling, John Slivka, SUC at Buffalo
Recent Developments in Summability Invariants, S. C. Chang, Brock University
Thirty-Seventh Spring Meeting: April 10-11, 1981 – Syracuse University
Friday Banquet Address:
The Physics of Toys, Henry Levinstein, Syracuse University
Papers Presented:
Foliations on Compact Riemannian Manifolds and the Ricci Curvature of the Leaves, Richard Escobales, Canisius College
Sequences of Sets: Various Convergence Concepts in Topology, Louis F. McAuley, SUNY at Binghamton
Perron-Frobenius Theory for Certain Affine Operators: An Application, Kenneth Lane, Hamilton College
Luck as a Statistical Phenomenon, Daniel S. Martin, SUC at Brockport
p-Adic Solutions of xyz = x + y + z = 1: Propaganda for Quadratic Reciprocity, Charles Small, Queen’s University
Solving Linear Equations by Row and Column Reduction, Norman Rice, Queen’s University
Time Series in M Dimensions: An Introduction and Exposition, Leo A. Aroian, Union College
The Fourteenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Systems of Mating and Equilibrium in the Presence of Imprinting , J. Kemperman, University of Rochester
Fifteenth Fall Meeting: November 6-7, 1981 – SUNY Brockport
Friday Banquet Address:
The End of the World on a Microcomputer, Kimyong Kim, SUC at Brockport
Papers Presented:
Data Encryption Based on the Factoring of Large Numbers, Jack Hollingsworth, RIT
Koebe Function Representation of Univalent Functions, Guy Johnson, Syracuse University
On Mappings of the Euclidean Plane and its Subplanes, Howard E. Bell, Brock University
Relational Databases, Patricia Woodworth, Ithaca College
A Case Study of Highway Fatality Rates and the 55 MPH Speed Limit, David Farnsworth, Eisenhower College
The 22nd International Mathematical Olympiad, Nura Turner, SUNY at Albany
Translates of Averages, Robert W. Sloan, Alfred University
A New Look at Analysis – Infinite Arrays in APL, R. W. W. Taylor, RIT
Analytic Geometry Revisited or How to Keep Busy Though Retired, Emmet Stopher, SUC at Oswego
Recent Developments in Summability Invariants, S. C. Chang, Brock University
Thirty-Eighth Spring Meeting: April 23-24, 1982 – Skidmore College
Friday Banquet Address:
Improved Spatial Skills in Mathematics Using Computer Graphics, Edwin H. Rogers, RPI
Papers Presented:
Analogous Spaces: Integrals and Complex Products, J. B. Harkin, SUC at Brockport
A Student-Centered Math Skills Center: Three Years of Experience at SUNY Geneseo, Gilbert A. Palmer, SUC at Geneseo
Weighted Voting for County Boards in New York, David Housman, Cornell University
Discriminant Analysis for Patient Placement, Martin Orr, NYS Health Department
Mathematics and Computer Science: A Curriculum, a Point of View, and the Future, Thomas M. O’Loughlin, SUC at Cortland
Large Aerospace Structures: Do I have to Understand Hilbert Space to Live in Outer Space?, Mark J. Balas, RPI
Why Vectors are not Arrows, Douglas L. Cushing, St. Bonaventure University
The Fifteenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Computational Complexity of Feasible Computations , J. Hartmanis, Cornell University
Sixteenth Fall Meeting: November 12-13, 1982 – St. Lawrence University
Friday Banquet Address:
Retraining Mathematicians to Teach Computer Science, Ed Dubinsky, Clarkson College of Technology
Papers Presented:
What Makes a Ring Finite?, Howard E. Bell, Brock University
Understanding and Teaching Mathematical Problem Solving, Alan H. Schoenfeld, University of Rochester
A Follow-up Study of the Winners of the U.S.A. Mathematical Olympiad, Nura Turner, SUNY at Albany
Graphical Solutions of Systems of n Linear Equations with n Equal to or Greater Than 3, Robert D. Larsson, North Country Community College
Teaching Statistics with Computers, Chancal Singh, St. Lawrence University
Some Interesting Properties of the Integer Function, Robert W. Sloan, Alfred University
A Simulation Approach to Evaluating Experimental Designs, Robin Lock, St. Lawrence University
The Role of the Monotone Method in the Study of Differential Equations, S. Leela, SUC at Geneseo
Thirty-Ninth Spring Meeting: April 22-24, 1983 – Sheraton Inn, Utica, New York
Joint Meeting with NYSMATYC
Invited Address:
The Mathematics Teacher of the 1980s, Stanley Bezuszka, Boston College
Papers Presented:
Fagin’s Theorem on Domain-key Normal Form for Relations, Douglas Cashing, St. Bonaventure University
On the Use of Multivariable Polynomials for Integrating Ordinary Differential Equations, Mike Mikalajanus, Montreal, Quebec
Writing About Mathematics, Dorothy Buerk, Ithaca College
Simple Sum-Preserving Arrangements of Series: A Discouraging Theorem, Paul Schaefer, SUC at Geneseo
Developments from Normal Surface Theory which Apply to Knot Spaces, Richard Gustafson, SUC at Oneonta
Business Simulation Games: A Successful Interim Course, Patti Frazer Lock, St. Lawrence University
The Sixteenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Some Recent Applications of Functional Equations to the Behavioral Sciences , J. Aczel, University of Waterloo
Seventeenth Fall Meeting : November 4-5, 1983 – Niagara University
Invited Addresses:
Some Work with Gifted High School Mathematics Students, Gerald Rising, SUNY at Buffalo
The Conway Criterion, Doris Schattschneider, Moravian College and Editor of Mathematics Magazine
Papers Presented:
The Problem with Problem Setting, Peter J. O’Halloran, Executive Director of the Australian Mathematics Competition and University of Waterloo
Solving Inequalities, Lawrence A. Trivieri, Mohawk Valley Community College
Minimal Sets and Ergodic Measures for B/G, Mostafa Nassar, SUNY at Buffalo
On the Groups that Contain Subgroups Having Finite Indices, Ter-Jeng Huang, SUC at Cortland
Do We Really Teach problem Solving?, Ruth Heintz, SUC at Buffalo
A Program for Underprepared Mathematics Students, Wendy L. Dunignan, Niagara University
A Counting Problem mod p, Gerald Myerson, SUNY at Buffalo
Fortieth Spring Meeting: April 6-7, 1984 Broome Community College
Friday Banquet Address:
The Plot Thickens and Other Stories, Allen Ziebur, SUNY at Binghamton
Papers Presented:
A “Good” Proof of ( ) ( ) ( )DIM S DIM S DIM V⊥+ = , Jack E. Graver, Syracuse University
The Power Maps as Endomorphisms in Rings, Howard E. Bell, Brock University
Forbidden Patterns for Triangle Centers, Andrew P. Guinand, Trent University
Tree Algorithm for Coin Flipping, Bette Warren, SUNY at Binghamton
A Critical Look at Binomial Confidence Intervals, Harold A. Still, Queen’s University
Is Modeling Just for Computers and Vice-versa?, Boris D. Rakover, St. John Fisher College
An Efficient Computational Procedure for the Symbolic Multiplication of Large Multivariate Polynomials, Mike Mikalajanus, Montreal, Quebec
Video Tape Production Made Easy, Dan Dodway, Broome County Community College
The Seventeenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Linear Algebra Without Tears – and Without Vector Spaces , P. Hilton, SUNY Binghamton
Eighteenth Fall meeting: November 2-3, 1984 – St. Bonaventure University
Friday Banquet Address:
Gifted Students in Mathematics, Robert Exner, Syracuse University
Invited Address:
Computing and the Changing Nature of College Mathematics, Donald Kreider, Dartmouth College
Papers Presented:
Upper Bound Graphs: A Polynomial-time Algorithm, Douglas Cashing, St. Bonaventure University
Determining Hidden Surfaces of Convex Polyhedra, Paul O’Heron, Broome County Community College
Teaching Experimental Applied Mathematics – Video Tape Project, Edwin Hoefer, RIT and Team Leader for the Seaway Section
Solving Trigonometric Inequalities, Boris D. Rakover, St. John Fisher College
International Congress of Mathematics – 82, Nura Turner, SUNY at Albany
Writing in the Math Classroom, Marcia Birken, RIT
Appreciating Efficient SortingI, Morton Goldberg, Broome County Community College
Analytical Hierarchies and Decision Making, Ronald Brzenk, Hartwick College
Polynomials, Map Coloring, and Flattening Equations, Frank Bernhart, RIT
Forty-First Spring Meeting: April 26-27, 1985 – Rochester Hilton
Joint Meeting with NYSMATYC
Invited Address:
Is Discrete Mathematics the New Math of the 80s?, Anthony Ralston, SUNY at Buffalo
Papers Presented:
Alternatives to Least Square Estimators, Marvin Gruber, RIT
Left, Right, and Other Things, Saleh I. Assad, Erie Community College
Derivations and Commutativity, Howard E. Bell, Brock University
Models Based on the Mean and the Median, David Farnsworth, RIT
Mathematics for Computer Science – A First Course, Eric R. Muller, Brock University
The Eighteenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
A Vector Approach to Euclidean Geometry , W. Jurkat, Syracuse University
Nineteenth Fall Meeting: November 8-9, 1985 – RIT
Friday Banquet Address:
Multivariate Displays: From Quipus to Faces, Howard Wainer, Educational Testing service, Princeton, NJ
Invited Address:
Nice Visual and Algebraic Approximations in Statistics, Warren Page, New York City Technical College and Editor of CMJ
Papers Presented:
A Special Case of Rigidity Theory: Bracing of Grids, Jack Graver, Syracuse University
Recontres or the Hat Checking Problem, Karl Davis, Wells College
Writing Across the Algebra Curriculum, Lawrence Trivieri, Mohawk Valley Community College
Do Fractals Make Calculus Obsolete?, Carl Kohls, Syracuse University
Approximate Coordinate Grids for Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations, Douglas Meadows, RIT
Orthogonality in Normal Linear Spaces, Charles Diminnie, St. Bonaventure University
Chisanbop is More Than Counting on Your Fingers, Dan Dodway, Broome County Community College
A Special Kind of Duality in Algebra, Armond Spencer, SUC at Potsdam
A Sylvester Theorem for Conic Sections, James Wiseman, RIT
Forty-Second Spring Meeting: April 18-19, 1986 – Ithaca College
Friday Banquet Address:
New Results in Fair Representation Dating from the Talmud, Alan Tucker, SUNY at Stony Brook
Papers Presented:
Making Mathematicians: A Developmental Challenge, Dorothy Buerk, Ithaca College
Finding Simple t-Designs by Using Basis Reduction, Donald L. Kreher, RIT
A Generating Property of Sums of Squares, J. Arpaia, St. John Fisher College
Using Prolog to Build a Micro Expert System in Beginning Calculus, Marcel A. Labbe, College Militaire Royal de Saint Jean
On Positive Representation by Linear Forms in 2 and 3 Variables, Daniel M. Cass, St. John Fisher College
Interactive Computer Graphics for Teaching Differential Equations (a Demonstration), John Hubbard and Beverly Henderson West, Cornell University
A Coin Tossing Problem and some Related Combinatorics, I, Roger H. Moritz, Alfred University
An Extension of the Gauss Markov Theorem to Linear Models with Random Parameters, Marvin Gruber, RIT
A Coin Tossing Problem and some Related Combinatorics, II, Roger H. Moritz, Alfred University
Low Dimensional Topology, Jeff Weeks, Ithaca College
The Nineteenth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Role of Algebra and Topology in Robotics and CAD/CAM , J. Hopcroft, Cornell University
Twentieth Fall Meeting: November 7-8, 1986 – Mohawk Valley Community College
Friday Banquet Address:
Mathematical Applications in High Technology, Joan Zelinski, PAR Government Systems Corporation
Invited Address:
Experimental Mathematics and Computer Graphics, or What is Chaos, Donald L. Kreider, Dartmouth and Treasurer of the MAA
Papers Presented:
ACL: A Combinatorics Language, Rebecca E. Hill, RIT
The Rifleman Problem, Edwin Hoefer, RIT
Commutativity Results for Rings with Redundancy in Multiplication, Howard E. Bell, Brock University
Modem Applications, Dan Dodway, Broome County Community College
Geometry of Singularities, Yih-Nan Gau, SUC at Geneseo
A Fair Allocation Problem Arising in the Talmud, John Maceli, Ithaca College
How Mathematics Should be Taught, Michael J. Segal, Student, SUNY Buffalo
Orthogonality in Normed Vector Spaces, Charles Diminnie, St. Bonaventure University
Forty-Third Spring Meeting: April 24-25, 1987 – Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Invited Addresses:
Logic in Computer Science, Anil Nerode, Cornell University
The Mathematical Competition in Modeling, B. A. Fusaro, Salisbury State College and Project Director, M.C.M.
Papers Presented:
Summability Domains not Containing ∅ , W. Beekman and S. C. Chang, Brock University
Is Every Polynomial over Every Finite Field the Sum of Three Irreducibles?, Gove Effinger, Skidmore College
The Kalman Filter from the Statistician’s Point of View, Marvin Gruber, RIT
Mathematical Applications in Perceptual Processes, Mou-Ta Chen, SUC at Brockport and Kathleen Chen, RIT
Enriching Mathematical Problem Solving – Interdisciplinary Linkages, Marcia Birken and Anne C. Coon, RIT
A Number Theoretical Variation on the Work of Al-Kasi, R. Daniel Hurwitz, Skidmore College
P-gonal Numbers that are Simultaneously the Sum and Difference of Two P-gonal Numbers, Pasquale J. Arpaia, St. John Fisher College
The Twentieth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Solitons and Exact Solutions of Nonlinear partial Differential Equations of Physical Interest,
M. Ablowitz, Clarkson
Twenty-First Fall Meeting: November 6-7, 1987 – SUNY at Buffalo
Friday Banquet Address:
The Simple Ingredients of Mathematical Models of Economic Growth (and Other Matters Economic, Mathematically Flavored), John C. G. Boot, SUNY at Buffalo
Invited Address:
Optimization Problems for the Pre-Calculus Curriculum, Ivan Niven, University of Oregon, Past President of MAA
Papers Presented:
Some Aspects of Curvature in Geometry, Lew Friedland, SUC at Geneseo
New Directions in College Mathematics, Jack Graver, Syracuse University
PROLOG for Mathematicians, Dave Beuerman, SUC at Oneonta
The Practical Uses of Combinatorics, Patricia Eberlein, SUNY at Buffalo
The Way it Was, Ivan Niven, University of Oregon
What Every Mathematician Should Know about Mathematics, Wayne Bialas, SUNY at Buffalo
Summing Series, Roger H. Moritz, Alfred University
Forty-Fourth Spring Meeting: April 29-30, 1988 – Brock University
Friday Banquet Address:
This Talk Has Two Titles: Memoirs of an Applied Mathematician, John P. Mayberry, Brock University
Papers Presented:
Hyperbolic Geometry from a Lorentzian Perspective, John A. Thorpe, SUNY at Albany
Roundabout Coloring Schemes, Frank R. Bernhart, RIT
Improved Estimation in Analysis of Variance Models (ANOVA), Marvin Gruber, RIT
B-Spline Surface Techniques for Solid Modeling, Chi-Ming Tang, SUC at Geneseo
Inequalities and Semigroups, William J. Ralph, Brock University
Special Session on Mathematics Education:
Adult Learners Ask the Darnest Questions, Betty Hurley Lawrence, Empite State College
Writing in Math Class, Margaret Hendery, Ithaca College
How to Ask Sensitive Questions without Getting Punched in the Nose, John C. Maceli, Ithaca College
Some One-Sample Diagnostics for the Introductory Statistics Class, Ron Menton, Ithaca College
The Twenty-First Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Counting Polyhedra , W. Tutte, University of Waterloo
Twenty-Second Fall Meeting: November 11-12, 1988 – Syracuse University
Friday Banquet Address:
The Life of a Star, Guy Johnson, Syracuse University
Invited Address:
Some Off-beat Representations of Positive Integers, Herbert S. Wilf, University of Pennsylvania, Editor of the Monthly
Papers Presented:
Industrial Mathematics: More than Applied Mathematics, Peter E. Castro, Eastman Kodak Company
Applications of Number-Theoretic Unbreakable Ciphers, Thomas W. Cusick, SUNY at Buffalo
A Humanistic Academic Environment for Learning Undergraduate Mathematics, Clarence F. Stephens, SUC at Potsdam
On the Divergence of the Euler Series, G. Behforooz, Utica College
SUPER: An Experiment in Schools and University Partnership, Patricia P. Tinto, Syracuse University
An Application of Group Theory to Perception, Mou-Ta Chen, and Kathleen Chen, SUC at Brockport
What Can participation Accomplish in Mathematics Class?, Abolghassen Alemzade, SUC at Cortland
The Geometric Theory of Three-Manifolds, Jeffrey R. Weeks, Ithaca College
Sixth International Congress on Mathematical Education (ICME-6), Howard C. Johnson, Syracuse University
Tracings in the Sand: A Case in Ethnomathematics, Marcia Ascher, Ithaca College
Forty-Fifth Spring Meeting: April 28-29, 1989 – Union College
Friday Banquet Address:
Chaos on a Circle, Susan Niefield, Union College
Papers Presented:
An Introduction to Multifractals, Michael Frame, Union College
The Semigroup of Binary Relations, Micael A. Breen, Alfred University
On Teaching mathematical Problem Solving, Richard T. Mahoney, SUC at Brockport
Four Colors: A Retrospective, Frank Bernhart, Rochester, New York
Teaching and Learning the Function Concept using ISETL, Donald L. Muench, St. John Fisher College
End Conditions for the Spline Functions Derived from Integration, G. Behforooz, Utica College
A New Look for Elementary Linear Algebra, (Parts 1 and 2), Richard D. Mayer, SUC at Oswego
Attempts to Represent a Step Function by a Power Series, Robert D. Larsson, Schenectady. New York
Mathematics Appreciation Courses for non-Majors, Patti Frazer Lock, St. Lawrence University
Countable Products of σ-compact Spaces, George Baloglou, SUNY Oswego
Concerning Random Number Generation, Joseph Straight, SUC at Fredonia
The Twenty-Second Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Concepts from Applied Mathematics , J. D. Cole, RPI
Twenty-Third Fall Meeting: November 10-11, 1989 – Utica College
Friday Banquet Address:
Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics and the Law, Mary W. Gray, American University
Papers Presented:
Mathematics Education, K through Graduate School: Critical Issues and Needed Actions, John A. Thorpe, SUNY at Buffalo
Computer Algebra and Mathematics, Moss Sweedler, Cornell University
On Choosing the Axiom of Choice, John D. Dixon, Carleton University
Some Problems of Dirichlet and Neumann, Discretely Discussed, Jim Conklin, Ithaca College
Solving Polynomial Equations which have no Real Roots, Robert D. Larsson, Schenectady. New York
Problem Solving: Improved Mathematics Instruction, Richard T. Mahoney, SUC at Brockport
Recent Changes in the High School Curriculum, Jack Graver, Syracuse University
A FORTRAN Program for Predicting Yields of Stocked Trout from Stream Fisheries, Verna Engstrom-Heg, SUC at Oneonta.
An Elementary Problem Solving Course, Margaret W. Groman, SUC at Oswego
What is Going On at Potsdam?, Robert D. Hofer, SUC at Plattsburgh
Geometrical Groups and Mental Transformations, Mou-Ta Chen, SUC at Brockport and Kathleen Chen, RIT
Designing a Computer Lesson, William Casolara, Tompkins Cortland Community College
Periodicities of Integer Sequences, Y. H. Harris Kwong, SUC at Fredonia
Correspondence between Mathematicians and the Dutch Graphioc Artist M. C. Escher, J. Taylor Hollist, SUC at Oneonta
Yet Another Look at Liberal Arts Mathematics, Armond E. Spencer, SUC at Potsdam
Forty-Sixth Spring Meeting: April 6-7, 1990 - Colgate University
Papers Presented:
Outtakes! Maybe Henry Ford was Right about History, Paul Schaefer, SUC at Geneseo
Mathematics: A Game for Spectators? Neil R. Grabois, President, Colgate University
Classroom Notes, Leonard Gillman, MAA Past President , University of Texas at Austin (Emeritus)
Problems in Discrete and Combinatorial Geometry, William Moser, McGill University
Use of a Programmable Calculator in the Classroom, Jack Graver, Syracuse University
A Comparison of Two Extensions of the First Order Logic, Norollah Talebi, Daeman College
Implied Illiteracy in Elementary mathematics Textbooks, R. Daniel Hurwitz, Skidmore College
Mathematical Microworlds and Problem Solving, Jack Narayan, SUC at Oswego
The Relationship of Conics to the Solution of Systems of Linear Equations, Robert D. Larsson, Schenectady. New York
A Not So Perfect Marriage – Computers and Mathematics, Paul O’Heron and Carmelita Keyes, Broome County Community College
A Common Riccati Equation, Roger H. Moritz, Alfred University
A Case for an Undergraduate Mathematics Course in Computer Simulation Modeling, Diane Driscoll Schwartz, Ithaca College
When Music and Mathematics Merge A Prelude to Iannis Xenakis, Angel E. Andreu, Monroe Community College
The Twenty-Third Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Combinatorial Group Theory: A Geometric Subject , M. W. Cohen, Cornell University
Twenty-Fourth Fall Meeting: November 2-3, 1990 – SUNY Oswego
Friday Banquet Address:
Some Mathematical Morsels, Ross Honsberger, University of Waterloo
Invited Addresses:
New Developments in Knot Thoery, William Menasco, SUNY Buffalo
How Reliable is a Computer-based Proof?, Clement Lam, Concordia University
Invited Lecture in Mathematics Education
Calculus: Where are We Going?, Peter Taylor, Queen’s University
Forty-Seventh Spring Meeting: April 19-20, 1991 – SUNY Oneonta
Friday Banquet Address:
A New Line of Fixed Points, Ross Geoghegan, SUNY Binghamton
Invited Addresses:
MAA Speaker
Title to be Announced, Fan Chung, Bell Labs
The Twenty-Fourth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Structure of Complex Analytic Dynamics, John Hubbard, Cornell University
Twenty-Fifth Fall Meeting: November 1-2, 1991 – SUNY Fredonia
Friday Banquet Address:
The Joy of Mathematics, Peter Hilton, SUNY Binghamton
Invited Addresses:
Leibniz and His Calculus, V. Frederick Rickey, Bowling Green State University
Area and Iterations and Matrices and Determinants, Gilbert Strang, MIT
Invited Lecture in Mathematics Education (TBA)
Forty-Eighth Spring Meeting: May 1-2, 1992 – Queen’s University
Friday Banquet Address:
Translating Biology into Mathematics and Back Again—A Case Study, Joan M. Geramita, Queen’s University
Invited Addresses:
Can Mathematics be of Any Use in Sociology? Keith Devlin, Colby College
Primality Testing and Carmichael Numbers, Andrew Granville, University of Georgia
The Twenty-Fifth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Guided Computer Experimentation in Mathematics –Euler, Mahler, Ramanujan, and MAPLE
Jonathan M. Borwein, University of Waterloo
Twenty-Sixth Fall Meeting: November 13-14, 1992 – Cornell University
Friday Banquet Address:
Logic as Linear Programming, Anil Nerode, Cornell University
Invited Addresses:
The One – Way Street Problem, Fred S. Roberts, Rutgers University
Geometric Models, Robert Connelly, Cornell University
Invited Lecture in Mathematics Education
Calculus, Computers, and Change, William E. Boyce, RPI
Forty-Ninth Spring Meeting: April 23-24, 1993 – SUNY Binghamton
Friday Banquet Address:
Breaking German Codes in WW II, Peter Hilton, SUNY Binghamton
Invited Addresses:
Can We See the Mandelbrot Set?, John Ewing, Indiana University
Undergraduate Mathematics – The First Two Years, Frank Giordano, US Military Academy
The Twenty-Sixth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Fractals and Iterated Function Systems, Douglas Ravanel, University of Rochester
Twenty-Seventh Fall Meeting: November 5-6, 1993 – Onondaga Community College
Friday Banquet Address:
Mathematics, Mother und Menschenwerk: A Pictorial Essay on the Mathematical Shapes and Principles Found in Nature and Society, Sam McInroy Corning Community College
Invited Addresses:
Subdividing and Averaging Polytopes, or What Your High School Teacher Didn’t Tell You about Discriminants, Louis J. Billera, Cornell University
What Can You Do with Mathematics if You Aren’t Going to Teach?, Peter E. Castro, Eastman Kodak Company
First John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
A History of Mathematics Course for Teachers, Based on Great Quotations, Israel Kleiner, York University
Fiftieth Spring Meeting: April 22-23, 1994 – SUNY Albany
Friday Banquet Address:
Computer Calculus and Workshop Calculus at Rensselaer, Joseph G. Ecker, RPI
Invited Addresses:
Viewing and Calculating the Roots of a Polynomial are as Easy as Coloring a Flag Red, White, and Blue, and Hiking Along a Continental Divide, William F. Lucas, The Claremont Graduate School
Soap Bubble Clusters, Including New Results by Undergraduates, Frank Morgan, Williams College
The Twenty-Seventh Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Imaging the Interior of the Body with Electric Fields, Margaret Cheney, RPI
Twenty-Eighth Fall Meeting: November 4-5, 1994 – RIT
Friday Banquet Address:
Laser Fusion – Will Mathematical Modeling Converge to Physical Reality?, R. Stephen Craxton, Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester
Invited Addresses:
The Mathematics of Card Shuffling, Kenneth A. Ross, University of Oregon
Why Gaussian Elimination Works Even Though it’s Unstable, Lloyd N. Trefethen, Cornell University
Second John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Instructional Transformation and Mathematics Education, Patricia K. Rogers, York University
Fifty-First Spring Meeting: April 21-22, 1995 – Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Friday Banquet Address:
Chaos and Complications for the Forced Pendulum, John Hubbard, Cornell University
Invited Addresses:
The Modeling Thread in the West Point, Frank Giordano, US Military Academy
Similarities between Taylor Series and Fourier, Deborah Tepper Haimo, University of Missouri at St. Louis and UCSD
The Twenty-Eighth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
A Tangled Tale, William W. Menasco, University at Buffalo
Twenty-Ninth Fall Meeting: November 3-4, 1995, Skidmore College
Friday Banquet Address:
Fun and Games with Penrose Tiles, Marjorie Senechal, Smith College
Invited Addresses:
Formulas for Primes, Underwood Dudley, Depauw University
Fair Division: From Cake Cutting to Dispute Resolutions, Alan Taylor, Union College
Second Annual Randolph Lecture
Talking Across Disciplines: Opportunities for and Obstacles to Bridging Mathematics and Mathematics Education, Jere Confrey, Cornell University
Fifty-Second Spring Meeting: April 12-13, 1996 - Elmira College
Friday Banquet Address:
Curriculum Reform: Paradigm Shifts Affect the Students, the Faculty, the Department, the Universe,... and Everything Else!, Barbara Reynolds, SDS, Cardinal Stritch College and Brown University
Invited Addresses:
After a Decade of Calculus Reform, are we at the End or the Beginning? ,John Kenelly, Clemson University Computing with DNA, Tom Head, SUNY at Binghamton
The Twenty-Ninth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Mathematical Aspects of Bubbly Flows, Donald Drew, RPI
Thirtieth Fall Meeting: November 8-9, 1996, -- SUNY Geneseo
Friday Banquet Address:
Happy 300th Birthday to the First Calculus, V. Frederick Rickey, Bowling Green State University
Invited Addresses:
Industrial Mathematics for Fun and Profit, Martha Siegel, Towson State University
The Genius of Euler, V. Frederick Rickey, Bowling Green State University
Third Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
The Impact of Research in Mathematics Education on my Teaching and on the Learning of Mathematics in my Classes, Eric Muller, Brock University
Fifty-Third Spring Meeting: April 18-19, 1997, Broome Community College
Friday Banquet Address:
Heuristic Problem Solving ,Don Gause, Binghamton University
Invited Addresses:
The Homeomorphism Problem for Closed Manifolds, F. Thomas Farrell, SUNY at Binghamton Famous Impossibilities and "Famous Impossibilities": Axioms that Guide our Teaching , Tom Rishel, Cornell University The Thirtieth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Whitehead's Algorithm in Free Groups, Surface Groups, and Hyperbolic Groups ,Karen Vogtmann, Cornell University
Thirty-First Fall Meeting: November 7-8, 1997, - Siena College
Friday Banquet Address:
Innovative Experiments in Mathematics and Beyond…and How I survived Them, Edward B. Burger, Williams College
Invited Addresses:
Rethinking Rigor in Calculus: The Role of the Mean Value Theorem, Tom Tucker, Colgate University
Seventy Years of Mathematics Magazine, Paul Zorn, St. Olaf’s College
Fourth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Math for Poets: Finding Math Lovers Among Humanities Students, Harriet Pollatsek, Mt. Holyoke College
Fifty-Fourth Spring Meeting: April 24-25, 1998 – York University
Friday Banquet Address:
Pay Equity and Statistics, Georges Monette, York University
Invited Addresses:
Cryptography and Sieve Methods, Ram Murty, Queen’s University
Discrete Geometry: Applicable and Applied, Walter Whitely, York University
The Thirty-First Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Dynamical Disease, William Langford, Fields Institute
Thirty-Second Fall Meeting: November 6-7, 1998, - Nazareth College
Friday Banquet Address:
Breaking Drivers’ License Codes, Joe Gallian, University of Minnesota at Duluth
Invited Addresses:
Where do Mathematical Ideas Come From: Experiences, Platonic Ideals, Discoveries, Constructions, or Formal Expressions?, Ed Dubinsky, Georgia State University
The Mathematics of Identification Numbers, Joe Gallian, University of Minnesota at Duluth
Fifth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
What Every Student of Mathematics Should Know, Jim Matthews, Siena College
Fifty-Fifth Spring Meeting: April 23-24, 1999 – Syracuse University
Friday Banquet Address:
Darkness at Night vs. Infinity, Peter Saulson, Syracuse University
Invited Addresses:
The Mathematics Behind a Nobel Prize in Economics, Philip Griffin, Syracuse University
The Archimedes Palimpsest: A Survey of the Physical and the Mathematical Document, Gary Towsley, SUNY Geneseo
The Thirty-Second Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Prime Factors, 2 by 2 Matrices, and the Hyperbolic Plane, Ross Geoghegan, SUNY Binghamton
Thirty-Third Fall Meeting: November 5-6, 1999, - Adirondack Community College
Friday Banquet Address:
The History of Infinite Series and Examples for Classroom Use, V. Fred Rickey, US Military Academy
Invited Addresses:
Calculus Books, Underwood Dudley, Depauw University
Local Operators and Operators Preserving Disjointness, Robert Kantrowitz, Hamilton College
Sixth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
The Mathematician and the Education of Teachers: Some personal Views:, Bernard Hodgson, Laval University
Fifty-Sixth Spring Meeting: April 14-15 2000, SUNY Oswego
Friday Banquet Address:
Eulers Crumbs, William Dunham, Muhlenberg College
Invited Addresses:
The Universe as a Phase Boundary in Four Dimensional Euclidean Space, Michael Grady, SUNY Fredonia
Introduction toMathematical Models of Infectious Diseases, Deborah Lawrence, The Sage Colleges
The Thirty-Third Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Infinite Source Poisson Models with Heavy Tailed Transmission Times, Probabilistic Modeling and Data Networks, Sidney Resnick, Cornell University
Thirty-Fourth Fall Meeting: November 3-4, 2000, - SUNY Fredonia
Friday Banquet Address:
Nonsense and Reality in Mathematics Education, Michael Steuben, Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology
Invited Addresses:
Applications of Differential Geometry to Mechanical Control Systems, Andrew Lewis, Queen’s University
Algebras that Go Up and Down, Georgia Benkart, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Seventh Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Mathematics Education: Where Have We Come From? Where are We Going? What’s Taking Us So Long?, Stephen West, SUNY Geneseo
Fifty-Seventh Spring Meeting: April 6-7, 2001 – Binghamton University
Friday Banquet Address:
Where in the History of Mathematics is S. Ramajuan, Gary Towsley, SUNY Geneseo
Invited Addresses:
Introduction to Mathematical Models of Infectious Diseases, Deborah A. Lawrence, The Sage Colleges
The Computer in a Drop of Water, Tom Head, Binghamton University
The Thirty-Fourth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Why Things Don’t Fall Down: Tensegrities and How They Hold the World Together, Robert Connelly, Cornell University
Thirty-Fifth Fall Meeting: November 2-3, 2001, - Brock University
Friday Banquet Address:
Why Math is (Still) Hard: Challenges for Mathematical Computing, Jonathan M. Borwein, FRSC Canada Research Chair; Director, Centree for Experimental and Constructive Mathematics, Simon Fraser University
Invited Addresses:
Can Mathematics Recognize Great Art?, Bill Ralph, Brock University
Mathematics for All, Edward Barbeau, University of Toronto
Eighth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Theoretical Thinking and High Achievement in Linear Algebra, Anna Sierpinska, Concordia University
Fifty-Eighth Spring Meeting: April 19-20, 2002 – SUNY Brockport
Friday Banquet Address:
It’s a Wonderful Life! Observations on a Career as a Mathematician, Luise-Charlotte Kappe, SUNY Binghamton
Invited Addresses:
Search for the Mean Value Theorem, Bob Rogers, SUNY Fredonia Statistics and Mathematics of Baseball, Ken Ross, University of Oregon The Thirty-Fifth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Is Honesty the Best Policy?, Alan Taylor, Union College Summer Meeting, June 21-22, 2002 – Williams College
Joint Meeting with Northeast Section
Invited Speakers:
Thomas C. Hales, University of Michigan
Thomas Garrity. Williams College
Sean McLaughlin, Recent Winner of National Undergraduate Research Prize Student at the University of Michigan
Thirty-Sixth Fall Meeting: November 1-2, 2002, - SUNY Potsdam
Friday Banquet Address:
Misadventures of a Maverick, Reuben Hersh, University of New Mexico
Invited Addresses:
Computer Graphics in Curved Spaces, Jeff Weeks
Pre-Calculus Circa 1748:Euler’s Introduction to the Analysis of Infinities, Mark McKinzie, Monroe Community College
Ninth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Educational Mathematics, David Henderson, Cornell University
Fifty-Ninth Spring Meeting: April 4-5, 2003 – Alfred University
Friday Banquet Address:
The Public’s Perception of Mathematics, Mike Breen, American Mathematical Society
Invited Addresses:
Rearranging the Alternating Harmonic Series, Carl Cowan, Purdue University Pricing Financial Derivatives: How Mathematics Gave Us Modern Finance, Norman Rice, Queen’s University The Thirty-Sixth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Graphite Boundary Sequence Problem, Jack Graver, Syracuse University
Thirty-Seventh Fall Meeting: November 7-8, 2003, - RIT
Friday Banquet Address:
Title?, William Thurston, Cornell University
Invited Addresses:
Pascal Matrices and Enjoying Linear Algebra, Gil Strang, MIT
Helmut Hasse and Wilhelm Blaschke: Nazi Sympathizers?, Sandy Segal, University of Rochester
Tenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Making Mathematics Meaningful, Patti Frazer-Lock, St. Lawrence University
Sixtieth Spring Meeting: April 23-24, 2004 – SUNY Cortland
Friday Banquet Address:
Reasoning About Dimensions You Cannot See, Ton Rishell, Weill Cornell Medical College, Qatar
Invited Addresses:
Recently Uncovered Flaws in Standards-Based Mathematics Tests, Alan Tucker, SUNY Stony Brook How to Always Win at Limbo, Ed Burger, Williams College The Thirty-Seventh Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Microsoft Computing: Writing on Molecules in Fluid Memory, Tom Head, SUNY Binghamton
Thirty-Eighth Fall Meeting: November 7-8, 2004, - Canisius College
Friday Banquet Address:
Joseph Liouville & Number Theory, Kenneth S. Williams, Carleton University
Invited Addresses:
Encouraging Creativity – Brock’s New Mathematics Program, Bill Ralph, Brock University
The Zeta Function, Prime Numbers, and the Zeroes, Steve Gonek, University of Rochester
Eleventh Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
High School Mathematics Education: Gaining Perspectives on a Fragmented System,
Eric Robinson, Ithaca College
Sixty-First Spring Meeting:, 2005 – Queen’s University
Friday Banquet Address:
What Art Can Teach Us about the Art of Teaching, Peter Taylor, Queen’s University
Invited Addresses:
The Foundational Crisis in Mathematics in the Period 1890-1935, Ole Nielsen, Queen’s University Discovering Galileo, Olympia Nicodemi, SUNY Geneseo The Thirty-Eighth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Rings of Integer Valued Polynomials, David Lantz, Colgate University
Thirty-Ninth Fall Meeting:October 28-29, 2005, - SUNY Geneseo
Friday Banquet Address:
Eine Kleine Nachtmagic, Colm Mulcahy, Spelman College
Invited Addresses:
Overcoming the effects of the Logarithmic Distribution of Numbers: Gradual and Tapered Overflow and Underflow, Peter Turner, Clarkson University
Episodes in the Early History of the Lucasian Chair, Jim Tattersall, Providence College
Twelfth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Everybody Wins: Why Mathematics Courses for Elementary School Teachers Matter and How They Can Benefit All Students, David Poole, Trent University
Sixty-Second Spring Meeting:, April 28-29, 2006 – Ithaca College
Friday Banquet Address:
Learning from Each Other.. and Having Fun Doing It, Philip Krasicky, Cornell University
Invited Addresses:
Sudo Latin Squares, James Conklin, Ithaca College
Polya Lecture - A Bird’s Eye View of the P vs. NP Problem, Steven Rudich, Carnegie-Mellon University
The Thirty-Ninth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Geometry of Relaxation Oscillations, John Guckenheimer, Cornell University
Fortieth Fall Meeting: October 13-14, 2006, - Marist College
A Joint Meeting of the Metro Section and the Seaway Section
Friday Banquet Address:
Some History of the Calculus of the Trigonometric Functions, V. Frederick Rickey, The United States Military Academy at West Point
Invited Addresses:
Planar Linkages, Nancy Hagelgans
Increasing the Numbers of Mathematics Majors , William Y. Velez, University of Arizona
The Mathematics of *Not* Voting, William S. Zwicker, Union College
Sixty-Third Spring Meeting:, April 27-28, 2007 – SUNY Oneonta
Friday Banquet Address:
Getting MAD in Class, Robin Lock, St. Lawrence University
Invited Addresses:
Mathematics in Digital Imaging, John F. Hamilton, Eastman Kodak Can We Improve the College Education of Future Secondary Mathematics Teachers? - Questions, Observations, Suggestions and Discussion, James Matthews, Siena College The Fortieth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Generalization to Infinite Graphs of a Theorem of W.T. Tutte, Mark Watkins, Syracuse University
Forty-First Fall Meeting: October 19-20, 2007, - Monroe Community College
A Joint Meeting of NYSMATYC and the Seaway Section of the MAA
Friday Banquet Address:
Math Busters! Examining Mathematical Folklore, Mark McKinzie, St. John Fisher College
Invited Addresses:
The Making of the 2008 Math Awareness Poster, Joe Gallian, University of Minnesota-Duluth
Output Driven Functions:The Mathematics of Linguistic Sound Patterns, Bruce Tesar, Rutgers University
Thirteenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Calculus in High School, David Bressoud, Macalester College
Sixty-Fourth Spring Meeting:, April 11-12, 2008 – Syracuse University
Friday Banquet Address:
The Snowball Earth, Scott Samson, Syracuse University
Invited Addresses:
Voting Systems that Combine Approval and Preference, Stephen Brams, NYU Splitting the Rent: Fairness problems and Fixed Points, Francis Su, Harvey Mudd College The Forty-First Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
On Positive Centers, Integral Geometry, and The Isoperimetric Deficit, Michael Gage, University of Rochester
Forty-Second Fall Meeting: October 17-18, 2008, - Siena College
Friday Banquet Address:
The Mathematics of Voting, Allan Taylor, Union College
Invited Addresses:
Benford's Law, Fraud Detection and Risk Measures in Auditing, Richard J. Cleary, Bentley College
Teaching Mathematical Concepts Using Real World Applications, Darren A. Narayan, RIT
Fourteenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Across 50 Years of Teaching, Jack Narayan, SUNY Oswego
Sixty-Fifth Spring Meeting:, April 3-4, 2009 – RIT
Friday Banquet Address:
Math in a Wicked World, Ian Gatley, RIT
Invited Addresses:
Experimentation in Mathematics and the First Year Student, David Brown, Ithaca College Eight Queens and More, Thomas Zaslavsky, Binghamton University The Forty-Second Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Calculus of Friendship, Steven Strogatz, Cornell University
Forty-Third Fall Meeting: October 23-24, 2009, - SUNY Fredonia
Friday Banquet Address:
A Brief History of the Calculus, Jeff Johannes and Gary Towsley, SUNY Geneseo
Invited Addresses:
The Infamous Five Color Problem, Dan Teague, North Carolina State University
Solitons: From Water Waves to Optical Fibers, Gino Biondini, SUNY Buffalo
Fifteenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
King Solomon on Teaching Math, Sam Vandervelde, St. Lawrence University
Sixty-Sixth Spring Meeting:, April 23-24, 2010 – SUNY Oswego
Friday Banquet Address:
Mathematical Quips, Quotes, Rumors, and Humorous Tales, Darren Narayan, RIT
Invited Addresses:
Life After Linear Algebra, Harris Kwong, SUNY Fredonia Far from the Tweeting Crowd —Good Advice from Unlikely Sources, Chris Leary, SUNY Geneseo The Forty-Third Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Adventures of a Statistician in the Legal System, Martin Wells, Cornell University
Forty-Fourth Fall Meeting: October 15-16, 2010, - SUNY Plattsburgh
Friday Banquet Address:
The Anatomy of Integers and Permutations, Anthony Granville, University of Montreal
Invited Addresses:
Animating Convergence, Frank Swenton, Middlebury College
Polya Lecture - Introduction to Knot Theory, Louis Kauffman, UIC
Sixteenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
K12 Educational Outreach in Mathematics: What? Why? How! WOW! , Kate Fowler, Clarkson University
Sixty-Seventh Spring Meeting:, April 1-2, 2011 – Nazareth College
Friday Banquet Address:
Don’t Make Me Sick: Adventures in Biomathematics (Making the World Safe for E. Coli), Greg Hartvigsen and Chris Leary, SUNY Geneseo
Invited Addresses:
Teaching by Asking: Good Questions: A Case Study, Maria Terrell, Cornell University Some Nonstandard Applications of Mathematics to Sports, Richard Cleary, Bentley College The Forty-Fourth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
The Mathematics and Physics of Invisibility Cloaks, Allan Greenleaf, University of Rochester
Forty-Fifth Fall Meeting: October 14-15, 2011, - St. Bonaventure University
Friday Banquet Address:
Forensic Mathematics and the World Trade Center Project, Jonathon Boyle, Eastman Kodak
Invited Addresses:
The Hardest Math I’ve ever Really Used, Dror Bar-Natan, University of Toronto
Pancake Sorting, Prefix Reversals, and DNA Rearrangements, Ivars Peterson, National MAA
Seventeenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
Sustain This! Making Math Matter, Tom Pfaff, Ithaca College
Sixty-Eighth Spring Meeting:, April 13-14, 2012 – Hamilton College
Friday Banquet Address:
Stories from the Development of Real Analysis, David Bressoud, Macalester College
Invited Addresses:
Two (more) Morsels from Euler, Bill Dunham, Muhlenberg College Bootstraping: Let your Data be your Guide, Robin Lock, St. Lawrence University The Forty-Fifth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Optimal Generation and Packing of Steiner Trees in a Rectilinear Grid, Col. Steve Horton, United States Military Academy
Forty-sixth Fall Meeting: October 19-20, 2012 - Elmira College
Friday Banquet Address:
Hands-on Laboratory Mathematics --A Bridge to Understanding, Jerome Epstein, Polytechnic University, Brooklyn
Invited Addresses:
Suppressing by sustaining -refuges in pest control, John Ringland, University at Buffalo Invariants under Group Actions to Amaze Your Friends!, Doug Ensley, Shippensburg University
Eighteenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
We Teach Math...to People, Jamar Pickreign, SUNY Fredonia
Sixty-Ninth Spring Meeting:, April 19-20, 2013 – SUNY Fredonia
Friday Banquet Address:
The abc Conjecture and Beyond, Chris Hill, St. Bonaventure University
Invited Addresses:
Whether "Mathematics" is a Plural Noun. , Chandler Davis, University of Toronto Mathematics to DIE for: The Battle Between Counting and Matching, Jennifer Quinn, University of Washington, Takoma The Forty-Sixth Annual Harry M. Gehman Invited Lecture
Stochastic Models on Graphs, Ted Cox, Syracuse University
Forty-seventh Fall Meeting: October 18-19, 201 – SUNY Potsdam
Friday Banquet Address:
Origami Math and its Increasing Intersections , Thomas Hull, Western New England University
Invited Addresses:
Quantum Walks on Graphs, Christopher Godsil, University of Waterloo
Quantifying Uncertainty in X-ray Images with National Security Applications, Aaron Luttman, National Security Technologies, LLC Nineteenth Annual John Randolph Lecture in Mathematics Education
The Art, Science, and Illusion of Mastery, Kevin Cheung, Carleton University