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Math Milestones
Frances Allen, a 1957 U-M Math Masters degree recipient, has received the top honor in computing. She is the first woman to receive the Turing Award, considered the Nobel Prize for computing, for her work with IBM.
http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2183936/woman-honoured-turing-award
Her bio is here http://domino.watson.ibm.com/comm/pr.nsf/pages/bio.allen.html
The 2007 Wolf Prize in Mathematics was awarded to UM Mathematics graduate, Stephen J. Smale. Now with University of California at Berkeley, Smale was recognized for his groundbreaking contributions that have played a fundamental role in shaping differential topology, dynamical systems, mathematical economics, and other subjects in mathematics. The Prize is awarded by the Wolf Foundation of Israel to promote science and art for the benefit of mankind.
The Abel
Prize is awarded to U of M graduate, Isadore M. Singer
Isadore M. Singer
was born in 1924 in Detroit and received his undergraduate degree
from the University of Michigan in 1944. After obtaining his Ph.D.
from the University of Chicago in 1950, he joined the faculty at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Singer has spent
most of his professional life at MIT, where he is currently an Institute
Professor. Singer is a member of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, the American Philosophical Society and the National Academy
of Sciences (NAS). He served on the Council of NAS, the Governing
Board of the National Research Council, and the White House Science
Council. Singer was vice president of the American Mathematical
Society from 1970 to 1972.
In
1992 Singer received the
American Mathematical Society's
Award for Distinguished Public
Service. The citation recognized
his "outstanding contribution
to his profession, to science
more broadly and to the public
good."
Among
the other awards he has received
are the Bôcher Prize
(1969) and the Steele Prize
for Lifetime Achievement
(2000), both from the American
Mathematical Society, the
Eugene Wigner Medal (1988),
and the National Medal of
Science (1983).
When
Singer was awarded the Steele
Prize his response, published
in Notices of the American
Mathematical Society, was: "For me the classroom is an important counterpart to research. I enjoy teaching undergraduates at all levels, and I have a host of graduate students, many of whom have ended up teaching me more than I have taught them." Singer
has also written influential
textbooks that have inspired
generations of mathematicians.
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