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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

21. LMS Full Index
citations00/totaro.html. Citation for cathleen Synge morawetz Citations/activities/prizes_com/citations01/morawetz.html. Citation for
http://www.lms.ac.uk/fullindex.html
LONDON MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY
FULL SITE INDEX
This page gives a full index of all the pages stored on this server.
1996 Survey of Mathematics Departments
the 1996 survey of mathematics departments
/activities/maths_funding_com/mathdept_survey96.html
1997 Survey of Mathematics Departments
the 1997 survey of mathematics departments
/activities/maths_funding_com/mathdept_survey97.html
1998 Survey of Mathematics Departments
the 1998 survey of mathematics departments
/activities/maths_funding_com/mathdept_survey98.html
1999 Hardy Lecture Tour
LMS Hardy Lecture Schedule, 1999
/meetings/oldstuff/hardy_99.html
2001 Hardy Fellow Lecture Tour
LMS Hardy Fellow Lecture Schedule, 2001
/meetings/oldstuff/hardy_01.html
2002 Hardy Fellow Lecture Tour
LMS Hardy Fellow Lecture Schedule, 2002
/meetings/poster.html
2003 Invited Lectures
LMS invited lectures
/meetings/invited03.html
4.1 The view of higher education
4.1 The view of higher education
/policy/tackling/node7.html
4.2 Some possible causes
4.2 Some possible causes
/policy/tackling/node8.html
4.3 Evidence
4.3 Evidence

22. Women
Grace Chisholm Young (18681944). Emmy Noether (1882 - 1935). Grace Murray Hopper(1906 - 1992). cathleen morawetz (1923 - ). Home Men Topics Activities.
http://www.math.wichita.edu/history/women.html
Women
Home
Men Topics Activities Following are biographies of some of the women important in the history of mathematics. Available Biographies Hypatia (c.370 – 415 C.E.) Elena Lucrezia Cornaro Piscopia (1646-1684) Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718 - 1799) Caroline Herschel (1750 - 1848) ... Activities

23. Cathleen Synge Morawetz
Sources. Knowles, Tyler. “cathleen morawetz.” www.agnesscott.edu;O'Connor, JJ and EF Robertson. “cathleen morawetz.” wwwgroups
http://www.physics.unl.edu/~fulcrum/women/cmorawetz.htm
Cathleen Synge Morawetz
Photo Courtesy of www.agnesscott.edu
May 5 1923 -
First Woman to receive National Medal of Science for Mathematics
  • Born May 5, 1923 in Toronto, Canada. Daughter of well-known Irish Mathematician J.L. Synge Learned to read at three years old. Returned to school where she met Herbert Morawetz. Summer before attending, she and Herbert were engaged and then married October 28, 1945, while she was attending school.
Family Life and Careers
  • With encouragement from her father she spoke with Richard Courant who brought her to the Institute at NYU. Had a daughter, Pegeen, in 1947. She then returned and did her orals. Had 3 more children, John, Lida, and Nancy (currently has six grandchildren). In 1951 she received her Ph.D. from NYU. Became research assistant at MIT for a year then returned to NYU in1952 and been there since.

24. Important Women Figures In Mathematics And Science
Important Women Mathematicians and Scientists. Mathematics. Florence David;Elizabeth Dickerman; Martha Haynes; Winifred Merrill; cathleen morawetz;
http://www.physics.unl.edu/~fulcrum/women.htm
Women Mathematicians and Scientists Mathematics Physics Astronomy Biology Chemistry

25. MSRI - Cathleen Synge Morawetz

http://www.msri.org/publications/ln/msri/1999/awm99/morawetz/1/

26. Science.ca Profile : Cathleen Synge Morawetz
cathleen Synge morawetz. Pure and Applied Mathematics. Maybe I becamea mathematician because I was so crummy at housework. . Achievement
http://www.science.ca/scientists/scientistprofile.php?pID=253

27. Science.ca Search Results
morawetz, cathleen Synge, Pioneering advances in partial differential equationsand wave propagation math used in aerodynamics, acoustics and optics, Pure and
http://www.science.ca/scientists/scientistsresults.php?category=200

28. American Mathematical Society Press Release
PROVIDENCE, RI Former American Mathematical Society President cathleen SyngeMorawetz has been awarded the 1998 National Medal of Science to be presented
http://www.ams.org/new-in-math/press/morawetz.html
American Mathematical Society Press Release
FIRST WOMAN AWARDED NATIONAL MEDAL OF SCIENCE FOR MATHEMATICS
AMS contact for more information: Tim Goggins (401) 455-4110, FAX (401) 331-3842, tjg@ams.org
December 10, 1998 Her work has also contributed fundamentally to the mathematical theory of scattering. This subject describes how waves interact with obstacles or changes in the medium. It provides the framework for analyzing many techniques for remote sensing, including ultrasound and radar. In commenting on her award, Professor Morawetz said, "This is an occasion of great moment for me. I am filled with gratitude to all those, and there were a great many, who helped me over many years, and I am proud to be the first woman mathematician to receive the medal. My biggest wish would be that it could help move more women forward in mathematics, be it in grade school or graduate school." Founded in 1888 to further mathematical research and scholarship, the 30,000-member AMS fulfills its mission through programs and services that promote mathematical research and its uses, strengthen mathematical education, and foster awareness and appreciation of mathematics and its connections to other disciplines and everyday life.

29. CML SEARCH RESULTS
Items 1 1 of 1 morawetz, cathleen S Prof Emer. New York University-CourantInstitute 251 Mercer Street New York, NY 10012-1110.
http://www.ams.org/cml-getitem/49890
CML Search Results
Search the CML
Update CML Directory of Institutions Help
Items: of Morawetz, Cathleen S
Prof Emer
New York University-Courant Institute
251 Mercer Street
New York, NY 10012-1110 Phone: Fax: 212-995-4121, : 212-998-3297
Email: morawetz@cims.nyu.edu Memberships: AMS, AWM, MAA, SIAM Comments: webmaster@ams.org

30. Kathleen Morawetz
Translate this page cathleen morawetz. 1923 -. cathleen war während ihrer Karriere in dermathematischen Community überaus aktiv, wie die folgende Auswahl
http://www.math.uni-oldenburg.de/schnupperstudium/unser_logo/morawetz.html
Cathleen Morawetz
Kurzer Lebenslauf
1923 Cathleen wird am 05. Mai in Toronto, Kanada, geboren. 1951 wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin am MIT 1957 Ernennung zum assistant professor an der NYU 1960 Ernennung zum associate professor an der NYU 1965 Ernennung zum full professor an der NYU 1978 Ernennung zum associate director des Courant Institute of Mathematical Science; Direktorin der National Cash Register Corporation 1980 Lester R. Ford Award of the Mathematical Association of America 1980 Ehrendoktor der Eastern Michigan University 1981 Ernennung zum deputy director des Courant Institute of Mathematical Science 1981 - 1984 Vorsitzende der mathematischen Abteilung des Courant Institute of Mathematical Science 1982 Ehrendoktor der Brown University 1982 Ehrendoktor des Smith College 1984 Ernennung zum director des Courant Institute of Mathematical Science 1990 Ehrendoktor von Princeton 1993 Ernennung zur herausragenden Wissenschaftlerin von der Association for Women in Science 1997 Krieger-Nelson Auszeichnung der Canadian Mathematical Society, die herausragende Leistungen von Mathematikerinnen ehrt
Der Text dieser Seite wurde von Dorothea Strauer zusammengestellt.

31. MSRI - Cathleen Synge Morawetz

http://elasmo.kaist.ac.kr/ln/msri/1999/awm99/morawetz/1/

32. MSRI - Cathleen Synge Morawetz

http://elasmo.kaist.ac.kr/ln/msri/1999/awm99/morawetz/1/controls/index_m.html

33. MSRI - Cathleen Synge Morawetz

http://msri.cc.biu.ac.il/ln/msri/1999/awm99/morawetz/1/

34. MSRI - Cathleen Synge Morawetz

http://msri.cc.biu.ac.il/ln/msri/1999/awm99/morawetz/1/controls/index_m.html

35. Morawetz Receives National Science Medal
In a 1990 interview, cathleen morawetz, now a professor emerita of mathematicsat the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
http://www.siam.org/siamnews/01-99/medal.htm
SIAM News Quick Search:
Morawetz Receives National Science Medal
Cathleen Morawetz In a 1990 interview, Cathleen Morawetz, now a professor emerita of mathematics at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University, commented on the environment in which she began to do mathematics: "Until the women's movement of the late sixties it really was considered very bad form for a woman to be overtly ambitious, very bad form. . . . And I think of course that underneath I was always very ambitious." ( citation information A decade before it would become culturally acceptable, Morawetz's ambition led her to produce results on transonic flowresults that, in the words of her Courant colleague Robert Kohn, "greatly influenced theoretical and practical thinking about airfoil design." In the subsequent years of a remarkable, multifaceted career, Morawetz has made further deep mathematical contributionsanalysis of the scattering of waves from obstacles, a scattering theory for nonlinear wave equations, and extended work on fundamental questions in transonic flow being a few highlights. At the same time, she has been a distinguished leader in the mathematical sciences community, both at Courant and nationally. As president of the American Mathematical Society (1995-97), Morawetz was "extraordinarily effective, taking a broad and inclusive view of mathematics," according to her SIAM counterpart Margaret Wright. "Her visible and unselfish dedication," Wright says, "gives her unquestioned credibility as a spokesperson for the mathematical sciences." Joseph Keller, a colleague of some 50 years, points out that "the set of directors of the Courant Institute has been a very impressive group of mathematicians; Cathleen [Courant's director from 1984 to 1988] was an appropriate member of that group."

36. A Celebration For Donald J. Lewis
boss at NSF and accordingly one of the few speakers allowed on the carefully guardedagenda by the organizers of the event, cathleen morawetz and Margaret
http://www.siam.org/siamnews/09-99/lewis.htm
SIAM News Quick Search: Former SIAM and AMS presidents Margaret Wright and Cathleen Morawetz set out to organize an event that would leave Lewis with a sense that his tireless efforts were indeed appreciated by the community. All photographs this page by Marty LaVor. Jim Crowley and Gil Strang with Lewis, who was formally commended by SIAM for "Service to the Mathematical Sciences," specifically "his inspiring and energetic leadership" of DMS, "his creative and thoughtful strategies for advancing mathematical sciences research, and his dedicated and tireless service on behalf of the mathematical sciences community." Role reversal: Judy Sunley first encountered Lewis as a student in his freshman calculus course at Michigan, 35 years ago this fall. "He wrote so fast on the board," she recalled, "that I had to trade off with a friend, taking notes and taking in what he was writing on the board . . . The median score on the first exam was about 30. . . ." However, she continued, he was a mentor "back when we didn't talk about mentors. . . . He cared about students." Much more recently, when frustrated by the bureaucratic aspects of his job at NSF, Lewis found himself turning to his former student (herself a former DMS director and, as of August, interim NSF assistant director for the Education and Human Resources Directorate).

37. Bernt Morawetz - ResearchIndex Document Query
morawetz Suncica Cani'c Barbara Lee Keyfitz y Eun This paper is inspired by workof cathleen morawetz, 17which analyses the bifurcation patterns patterns in
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/cs?q=Bernt Morawetz

38. The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Index Of MOR
Morava, Jack, Rice University, 1968. morawetz, cathleen, New York University,1951. Mordecki, Ernesto, Steklov Institute of Mathematics, 1994. Mordell, Louis,
http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/letter.phtml?letter=MOR

39. Scientific Distinction<
Peter D. Lax and cathleen S. morawetz have served terms as President of the AmericanMathematical Society; Marsha J. Berger, Robert V. Kohn and and Michael L
http://www.cims.nyu.edu/information/brochure/scientific.html
Scientific Distinction
The career of a scientist encompasses research, teaching, and service to the community at large. The distinctions received by Institute faculty are correspondingly diverse. Prizes from professional societies, foundations, and government organizations provide one form of recognition. The Institute's faculty members have received many such awards, including three National Medals of Science, two MacArthur Foundation Fellowships, two Wolf Prizes, one Veblen Prize, two Packard Foundation Fellowships, and fourteen NSF Presidential Young Investigator, PECASE, or CAREER awards, as well as many Sloan Research Fellowships, Guggenheim Foundation Fellowships, and NSF Postdoctoral Fellowships. Election to elite scientific societies serves as another type of recognition. The Institute's faculty includes fourteen members of the National Academy of Sciences, twelve Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and four Fellows of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics. Several members of the faculty have been active in the governance of scientific organizations or have served on committees that guide national science policy. Peter D. Lax and Cathleen S. Morawetz have served terms as President of the American Mathematical Society; Marsha J. Berger, Robert V. Kohn and and Michael L. Overton have served terms on SIAM's Board of Trustees or Council; Joel H. Spencer has served on the AMS Executive Committee; Peter D. Lax was a a member of the National Science Board for six years; and several faculty members have served on or chaired committees of the National Research Council.

40. Autres Mathématiciennes
Allyn JACKSON cathleen morawetz receives National Medal of Science,Notices of the AMS, volume 46, Number 2, February 1999, p. 352.
http://www.desargues.univ-lyon1.fr/home/fem/biblio/biblio-1-13.html

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