History of the Pacific Northwest Section
of the Mathematical Association of
America
The following
appears in A History of the Department of
Mathematics at the University of Washington, 1861 to 1991. "On February 4, 1919, the Department
discussed the possibility of organizing a Northwest section of the Mathematical
Association of America. After some
discussion, the idea was tabled."
In the fall of
1929, H. E. Slaught (President of the MAA in 1919), inquired of the University
of Washington mathematics department about the desirability of forming a
Pacific Northwest Section of the MAA. J.
P. Ballantine consulted his colleagues and the 26 other MAA members in
Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Vancouver, Canada. The answers were "doubtless honest, but
not over encouraging." Only 11
responded and only 7 of these favored the idea.
The idea was dropped.
On June 24,
1936, Albert A. Bennett (Vice President of the MAA in 1934) wrote to F. L.
Griffin at Reed College and inquired whether anyone had considered organizing a
section of the MAA in western Oregon.
Bennett wrote to Reed College because he understood "that there is
a rather natural feeling of jealousy between the two state institutions in that
part of Oregon, owing to a suspicion of political juggling of funds. It may be, therefore, that neither the
University nor the Agricultural College could make a move without having its
impulses open to suspicion."
Bennett made a strong case.
However, Griffin's response, if any, has been lost to posterity.
A petition,
dated May 9, 1945, for the formation of a new section to be known as the
Pacific Northwest Section was submitted to MAA President C. C. MacDuffee. There were eighteen signatures on the
petition:
Daniel Buchanan, F. S. Nowlan,
Walter H. Gage, D. C. Murdoch, and S. A. Jennings of the University of British
Columbia;
Mary E. Haller, Ross A. Beaumont, A.
R. Jerbert, Hermance Mullermeister, and Roy M. Winger of the University of
Washington;
L. G. Butler, M. S. Knebelman, and
Paul Nemenyi at the State College of Washington;
T. S. Peterson, A. F. Moursund, and
Frank Edwin Wood of the University of Oregon;
W. E. Milne and G. A. Williams at
the State College of Oregon.
Professor
Knebelman acted as chair of the committee that petitioned for the new section
and F. S. Nowlan evidently served as secretary.
The new section received formal approval by the Board of Governors at
its Chicago meeting on November 24, 1945.
Meeting.
April 10-11, 1947, University of British Columbia
The first
meeting was held on April 10-11, 1947 in Vancouver, British Columbia. S. A. Jennings gave the invited hour address,
titled "Topological methods in algebra." There were also 14 short papers. The President of the University of British
Columbia, N. A. M. MacKenzie, welcomed the group. The question of joint meetings with the AMS
arose, and many of the meetings were joint beginning in the early 1950's. Forty seven persons attended this meeting,
including 30 members of the MAA.
Meeting. March 26-27, 1948, University of Oregon
The second
meeting was held on March 26-27, 1948 at the University of Oregon. The invited address, given by Ivan Niven ,
was titled "The density of a set of integers." There were 16 other papers and a conference
on the mathematical training of prospective secondary school teachers. 59 persons attended, including 43 members of
the MAA. There was a conference on the
"Mathematical training of prospective secondary school
teachers." A committee, chaired by
H. H. Irwin of State College of Washington and including high school teachers
from various regions, was appointed to consider possible improvements in the
Pacific Northwest. The committee was
asked to report back at the 1949 meeting.
Meeting. March 25-26, 1949, Oregon State College
There were two invited addresses: C. M. Cramlet of the University of Washington
spoke "On algebraic and differential invariants," and J. H. Curtiss
of the National Bureau of Standards spoke on "The mathematical program of
the National Bureau of Standards."
There were 18 other papers. 47
AMS members attended and 58 MAA members attended.
One of the first issues faced by the section
concerned the geographical extent of the section. Montana, Idaho, Alaska and Alberta were not
included in the original bylaws. Idaho,
Alaska, Alberta and Montana were added to the section at this meeting. Later, parts of Idaho and Montana were ceded
to other sections. The Irwin committee,
appointed in 1948, made a report.
Numerous persons expressed opinions on this difficult problem. Finally a motion was adopted unaminously
which asked the committee to continue "to act for another year in an
effort to realize its objectives and implement its present findings."
In 1949 it was
determined that June was the best time for sectional meetings. Thus, beginning in June 1950, all sectional
meetings were scheduled in June until 1993, after which some meetings are in
June and some in the spring. That was
also the first meeting at which a registration fee was assessed: $1 per
person. This fee was agreed upon without
dissent at the 1949 meeting "after considerable discussion pro and
con."
Meeting. June 16, 1950, University of Washington
The invited
address, given by Howard M. Eves of Oregon State College, was titled
"Dissections." There were five
other papers. 48 persons attended,
including 34 MAA members. The Irwin
committee did not make a report and was discharged with the additional
recommendation that the committee's final report be given as much publicity as
possible.
Meeting. June 15-16, 1951, State College of Washington
(Pullman)
The meeting was
joint with AMS. The invited address,
given by Z. W. Birnbaum of the University of Washington was titled "On
estimating a probability distribution from a finite number of
observations." There were seven
other papers. 49 persons, including 35
MAA members, attended this joint AMS-MAA meeting. At this meeting a committee was appointed to
look into the possibility of conducting mathematical contests in high schools
in the section. After the meeting the
section's bank balance was $69.50.
Meeting. June 20, 1952, University of Oregon
The meeting was joint with the AMS, the Biometric Society,
and the Econometric Society. The invited
address was given by Carl B. Allendoerfer of the University of Washington, and
was titled "Continuous vector fields". There were three other papers and a symposium
(panel) on calculus teaching. Other hour
talks included a talk by Adriano Buzzati-Traverso, which was sponsored by the
Biometric Society; "On some discrete non-Markovian processes," by
Mark Kac of Cornell University and the Institute for Advanced Studies and
sponsored by the University of Oregon as part of its 75th anniversary;
"Solving simultaneous equations is not trivial," by G. E. Forsythe of
NBS and sponsored by the AMS; and "On distribution-free tests of fit for
continuous distribution functions," by Z. W. Birnbaum of the University of
Washington and sponsored by the Institute for Mathematical Statistics. 80 persons attended, including 61 MAA
members.
There was no
report from the contest committee, but Professor Ghent of the University of
Oregon described the contest that was conducted in Oregon on May 1, 1952. At a symposium on calculus teaching, one
young professor suggested the introduction of certain concepts which will allow
for "an economy of time and thought in later courses since introduction of
whole new set of concepts can be avoided."
For example, the binary relation can be introduced before
functions. The different kinds of limits
can all be handled by introducing Moore-Smith limits, which are no more
complicated than the limit of a sequence.
Linear functionals can be used to clarify the maltreated differential
and total differential. Etc.
Meeting. June 19, 1953, Montana State University,
Missoula
The invited address was given by Leo Moser of the University
of Alberta and was titled "The distribution of quadratic
residues." There were five other
papers as well as a symposium on The connecting link between college algebra
and abstract algebra. There was also a
joint dinner with the AMS. 57 persons
attended the meeting, including 43 MAA members.
Dormitory accommodations cost $1.50 per person per night. There was a symposium on the connecting link
between college algebra and abstract algebra.
The contest committee reported on separate activities in British
Columbia and Oregon. But the director of
mathematics for the Seattle public high schools is opposed to any official
contests. So it was agreed to
discontinue the idea of a Pacific Northwest Contest, while retaining the
Contest Committee.
Meeting. June 19, 1954, Reed College
The invited address, given by Cletus Oakley of Haverford
College, was titled "Modern mathematics for freshmen." There were two other papers, a symposium on
college mathematics, and a joint dinner with the AMS. 73 persons attended, including 55 MAA
members. At the Business Meeting, a
recommendation from the Board of Governors was discussed, namely that the
sectional Governor be a member of the Executive Committee of the section. This posed a problem since the section had no
such committee. There was considerable
discussion as to how this recommendation could be implemented, including a
motion to table which was seconded but failed.
Finally a successful motion amended the bylaws as follows: "There shall be an Executive Committee .
. . consisting of the Officers and the Governor of the Section."
Meeting. June 17, 1955, University of British Columbia
The invited address was given by E. S. Keeping of the
University of Alberta and was titled "Statistical decisions." There were two other papers and a symposium
(panel) on freshman mathematics.
1956 Meeting.
There was no meeting because of the national meeting in Seattle.
Meeting. June 14, 1957, State College of Washington
The invited address, given by R. H. Bruck of the University
of Wisconsin, was titled "New patterns in geometry." There was a joint dinner with the AMS. There was a symposium on Computing Machines
moderated by Arvid Lonseth of Oregon State College. The titles of the speakers' talks were
"The University of British Columbia computing centre," "Large
scale industrial computers and the universities," and "The computer
and the curriculum." It was
announced that the MAA was taking over the national mathematics contest that
had been run by the New York section.
Meeting. June 20, 1958, Oregon State College
The invited address was given by A. Erdelyi of Cal-Tech and
was titled "Operational calculus and generalized functions." There were five other papers and a joint
dinner with the AMS. The Treasurer
reported a bank balance of $25.47 as of June 20, 1958.
Meeting. June 19, 1959, University of Oregon
The invited address, given by John L. Kelley of the
University of California, Berkeley, was titled "Set theory and
numbers." There were three other
talks. 111 persons attended, including
69 MAA members.
Meeting. June 17, 1960, Montana State University,
Missoula
The invited
address was given by Paul Rosenbloom of the University of Minnesota on
"Implications for colleges of the new school mathematics
programs." Four other talks were
presented. There was a report on the
1959-60 visiting lectures program for the high schools. "While in some cases inadequate
publicity and poor local organization hindered the effectiveness of the
program, it was generally agreed that the program was very
worthwhile."
Meeting. June 17, 1961, University of Washington
The invited
address, given by Wolfgang Wasow of the University of Wisconsin, was titled
"Singular perturbations of differential equations." There were six other talks. 83 persons attended. It was reported that a sum of $10,000 was
made available for lectures in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Alaska and that
about 20,000 high school students and 500 faculty had heard the lectures.
1962 Meeting.
There was no meeting held because of the national meeting in Vancouver.
Meeting. June 21, 1963, Western Washington State
College
The invited
address was given by Hans Samelson of Stanford University, and was titled
"Vector fields on spheres."
Six other papers were presented and 78 persons attended.
Meeting. June 19, 1964, Washington State University
The invited address was given by Roy Dubisch of the
University of Washington, who reported on the work of educational Services,
Inc. in developing a modern mathematics program in Africa. Three other papers were presented as well as
a symposium on CUPM recommendations for the training of elementary school
teachers. The meeting was joint with
SIAM and 120 persons attended, including 62 MAA members.
Meeting. June 18-19, 1965, University of Oregon
Invited addresses were given by N. J. Divinsky of the
University of British Columbia on "Rings and radicals," André Deprit
of the Boeing Company on "Some aspects of celestial mechanics, with
applications to space travel," and A. A. Goldstein of the University of
Washington on "Control theory and mathematical programming." There was also a panel discussion on
mathematics in the two-year college. 154
persons, including 95 MAA members attended this joint meeting with the AMS and
SIAM.
Meeting. June 17-18, 1966, University of Victoria
Three invited
addresses were given: E. A. Shoemaker of
Simon Fraser spoke on "The uniqueness in the mathematical theory of
plasticity"; R. S. Pierce of the University of Washington spoke on
"Boolean algebras--some old and new problems"; and G. W. Burrows of
Boeing spoke on "An application of Kalman filtering to passive
ranging." Six other papers were
presented as well as a panel discussion on CUPM report on a general curriculum
in mathematics, and a panel discussion on mathematics at the two-year
college--points of view. This was the
largest meeting in the section's history.
179 persons, including 85 MAA members, attended the meeting which was
joint with SIAM. The host of the meeting
was the department chairman, S. A. Jennings, who gave the invited address at
the first sectional meeting in 1947. By
consent, the one dollar registration fee was waived for this meeting.
Meeting. June 16-17, 1967, University of Montana,
Missoula
Three invited addresses were given: D. C. Barnes of Washington State University
spoke on "Bounds on the eigenvalues of nonhomogeneous strings";
Bertram Yood of the University of Oregon spoke on "Structure theorems for
Banach algebras"; and J. W. Weber of Washington State University spoke on
"The application of biharmonic eigenfunctions to a plate
problem." Seven other papers were
presented in a meeting of junior and community colleges. 67 MAA members attended this meeting. Representatives of the junior and community
colleges of the section met for a program specifically designed for instructors
of mathematics at two-year colleges. J.
Knutson, Portland Community College, chaired this session. At the Business Meeting, the bylaws were
amended to provide for a Second Vice-Chairman, who shall represent the two-year
colleges on the Executive Committee. The
new position was immediately filled by Theodore White of Everett Junior
College. After 1976, the First and
Second Vice-Chairmen were replaced by the Vice Chairman for 4 year colleges and
the Vice Chairman for 2 year colleges.
Meeting. June 14-15, 1968, Reed College
Five invited addresses were given: Joseph Hashisaki of Western Washington State
College gave a talk titled "Arithmetic in community colleges"; Alex Rosenberg of Cornell University spoke on
"CUPM recommendations for qualifications of college teachers and for a
university parallel mathematics curriculum for two-year colleges"; W. J. Firey of Oregon State University gave a
talk titled "Existence theorems for convex surfaces"; Thomas Hungerford of the University of
Washington spoke on "Special topics in linear algebra"; and Melvin
Torseth of Everett Community College spoke on "Optimal instruction: fact or fantasy?" It was agreed to award prizes of $30, $25 and
$20 and a free MAA membership to those students who ranked first, second and
third respectively among participants in the Putnam Competition from
institutions in the section. In 1971 the
first prize went to Joe Buhler, Reed College.
1969 Meeting. This
meeting took place in conjunction with the national meeting at the University
of Oregon, August 25-27, 1969. The
Business Meeting was August 25, 1969.
It was agreed to join in the sponsorship of the Northwest Mathematics
Conference at an annual expenditure not to exceed $150. [This policy was dropped in 1981.]
Meeting. June 18-19, 1970, Pacific Lutheran University
There were two invited addresses at this
joint meeting with AMS and SIAM: Richard
M. Koch of the University of Oregon gave a talk titled "Why contour
integration leads to a hefty dose of topology in modern differential
geometry," and Emilio Gugliardo of Oregon State University spoke on
"The lack of mathematical vitamins in the devopment of artificial
intelligence." There was a special
program for community colleges including a panel discussion on the in-service
training program for community college mathematics teachers at the University
of Oregon. There were ten other talks
and a panel discussion on the purpose and content of upper division courses in
geometry. There were 120 persons in
attendance.
Meeting. June 18-19, 1971, Oregon State University
There were two invited addresses
given: Keith Yale of the University of
Montana spoke on "Fourier analysis and the origins of set theory,"
and Victor Klee of the University of Washington spoke on "Shapes of the
future." There were four panel
discussions: Should the standard
freshman calculus course be taught with the aid of computers?; Teaching
occupational math; An instructional system for occupational and developmental
students; and Using the audio-tutorial approach. There were 168 person who attended this joint
meeting with the AMS, including 113 MAA members. The treasurer reported that annual
expenditures were exceeding annual income and suggested that the section adopt
an annual budget. This wasn't done, but
in 1972 it was agreed to raise the registration fee from $1 to $2, students
exempted as before.
Meeting. June 16, 1972, University of Washington
There were three talks on Friday: Frederick C. Johnson of Boeing spoke on
"An algebraic look at Kalman filtering and recursion estimation"; T.
G. Ostrom of Washington State University spoke on "Linear algebras and
geometries"; and David Ragozin of the University of Washington spoke on "Why Lagrange failed
to discover the Weierstrass approximation theorem." There was also a panel discussion on student
evaluations of faculty. There were ten
talks in the Saturday sessions which were devoted to junior and community
colleges. 171 persons attended this
joint meeting with the AMS and SIAM, including 120 MAA members.
Meeting. June 15-16, 1973, Western Washington State
College
George Pólya
gave an inspiring dinner talk titled "Galileo: his life and contributions
to the scientific method." He
received a standing ovation. Two invited
addresses were given: David Larman of
the University College, London spoke on "The most significant advances in
geometry in the last decade"; and John Kenelly of Clemson University spoke
on "The challenge spectrum in the various mathematical
sciences." Three other talks were
also given at this joint meeting with the AMS and SIAM. At the Business Meeting prior to lunch, the newly
elected Chairman, John Reay, drew a confusing map showing the route to the
dining hall. It was suggested that he
just lead the way, but he declined to eat there.
1974
Meeting. The Business Meeting of the section was
held on August 23, during the International Congress in Vancouver, British
Columbia, August 21-25, 1974. 29 persons
attended the Business Meeting.
Meeting. June 20-21, 1975, Washington State University
There were two invited addresses: Ivan Niven of the University of Oregon spoke on
"Extremal problems unmanageable by calculus," and Roy Dubisch of the
University of Washington spoke on "Exporting mathematics to less developed
nations: success or failure." There was a panel discussion on trends in
mathematics training, as well as a community college program. The meeting was joint with AMS and SIAM.
Meeting. June 18-19, 1976, Portland State University
There were six invited addresses. Richard M. Koch of the University of Oregon
gave a talk titled "Invariant functions on matrices"; Dean McIntire
of Central Oregon Community College spoke on "Cognitive style mapping and
its relationship to the mathematics lab"; Harold Hauser of Blue Mountain
Community College gave a talk titled "Trinomial expansion and its geometric
design"; Raymond Mayer of Reed College spoke on "Some applications of
nonstandard analysis to number theory"; Eugene Maier of the University of
Oregon gave a talk titled "Fancy meeting you here--a college algebra
counting problem leads to an unexpected encounter with e"; and Troy Downey of Portland
Community College spoke on "Cases versus graphs."
1977
Meeting. The meeting was held in conjunction with
the national meeting at the University of Washington on August 16, 1977. The meeting included a parallel session for two-year
colleges. There were 21 persons in
attendance. The excess money problem
persisted. The treasurer reported a
balance of $771.82. It was successfully
moved that the officers investigate proposals for the use of excess money in the treasury. Preference was to be given to spending the
money in the Northwest.
Meeting. June 16, 1978, University of Oregon
The invited addresses were: Joel Davis of Oregon State University spoke
on "Design of functions for handheld calculators"; Ivan Niven of the University
of Oregon gave a talk titled "Solved and unsolved problems in
tilings"; Jerine Ridgeway of Bellevue Community College spoke on
"Math for math avoiders"; and William Firey of Oregon State
University spoke on "Contact probabilities between convex figures." Arvid T. Lonseth of Oregon State University
gave the dinner talk, titled "In the wake of galleons (some mathematical
problems from the age of discovery)."
John Loughlin and Jim Snow of Lane Community College presented
"Home grown video." There was
also a panel discussion on computer literacy for technical students at this
joint meeting with the AMS and SIAM.
At the Business
Meeting, the use of excess money was discussed.
The following motion was successful:
"Invited MAA speakers at the annual section meeting be invited
guests of the section at the meeting banquet." The issue of excess funds was then referred
to the Executive Committee. At this
meeting, secretary-treasurer John Herzog gave a short slide presentation on the
new MAA headquarters building and reminded members to send money to the
building fund.
Meeting. June 15, 1979, University of British Columbia
Invited addresses were: T. Fletcher of Vancouver Community College
spoke on "An introduction to cognitive mapping (evaluating student
potential)"; Douglas A. Lind of the University of Washington gave a talk
titled "Furstenburg's proof of Szemeredi's theorem (or, ergodic theory
strikes again)"; D. Dale Olesky of the University of Victoria spoke on
"Cooperative education in mathematics"; Constance Reid gave a talk
titled "The answer to the question everyone asks"; Ved P. Madan of
Red Deer College spoke on "Geometrical theorems in slides--an innovative
approach for teaching geometry"; Hazel Jo Reed of Evergreen State College
spoke on "Compartmentalization of mathematical cognition"; and
Kenneth A. Ross spoke on "A probabilistic approach to studying
groups."
Meeting. June 20-21, 1980, Central Washington
University
There were three
invited addresses: Larry Runyan of
Shoreline Community College spoke on "Cold calculating conservation";
A. B. Willcox, as Executive Director of the MAA, gave a talk titled
"Mathematics: where are we
going? what mathematics education can do
about it"; and Donald W. Bushaw of Washington State University spoke on
"Minimal competencies, maximal confusion, and mean people." A dinner talk was given by Hugh Burkhardt of
the Shell Centre for Mathematics Education, England, titled "England's
experience with problem solving curricula:
how it has affected the way we teach mathematics." There was also a panel discussion on
mathematical services provided for our students. This was the smallest sectional meeting on
record. Only 45 persons were brave
enough to attend this joint AMS-MAA-SIAM meeting one month after Mount St.
Helens exploded on May 18, 1980.
In 1980 Sue
Kaplan at Western Washington State University was persuaded to begin editing a
newsletter, to be circulated two times a year.
After producing a beautiful newsletter for the spring of 1981 that was well
received, Sue had to abandon the project.
Meeting. June 19-20, 1981, Lewis and Clark College
Three invited addresses were given: Ivan Niven of the University of Oregon spoke
on the "The way it was"; Neal Koblitz of the University of Washington
spoke on "Why study equations over finite fields?"; and Ansel Johnson
of Portland State University gave a luncheon talk titled "Mathematics used
in monitoring Mt. St. Helens."
There was a panel discussion on mathematics contests as well as eight
other papers. 112 persons attended,
including 66 MAA members.
Meeting. June 18-19, 1982, Western Washington
University
There were three invited addresses: Edwin Hewitt of the University of Washington
gave a talk titled "Even mathematicians are odd"; Marcia P. Sward of
the MAA gave a talk titled "Like 55, mathematics saves lives"; and
James A. Cochran of Washington State University spoke on "A potpouri of
eigenvalue results--the exploitation of analogies." There were eight other talks at this meeting
as well as two panel discussions, one on mathematics and computer science, and
one on trends in graduate programs.
Marjorie Enneking of Portland State University was elected
Chair-elect. She was the first woman
elected to office in the section, though the Newsletter Editor Sue Kaplan was
an officer on the Executive Committee in 1980.
Meeting. June 16-18, 1983, University of Idaho
This meeting had seven invited
addresses: Gail Adele Williams of the
University of Idaho spoke on "Mathematics at work in society (MAWIS)";
John Reay of Western Washington University gave a talk titled "Modeling
measle epidemics"; Donald J. Albers of Menlo College gave a talk titled
"Mathematicians are people, too"; Peter J. Hilton of SUNY at Binghamton spoke on "The
early history of computers"; John Loughlin of Lane Community College spoke
on "Making math video tapes"; Branko Grünbaum of the University of
Washington gave a talk titled "Geometry of Moorish ornamentation";
and Calvin T. Long of Washington State University spoke on "Discovering
Fibonacci identities." The first
sectional minicourse (called a short course) was "Computer graphics in mathematics
instruction," which was presented by David Moursund, University of
Oregon. There was a panel discussion on
the honors program in mathematics, and 11 shorter presentations. 135 persons attended the meeting. On June 1, 1983 the section treasury had a
balance of $1089.82, apparently the first time it exceeded $1000.
1984
Meeting. There was no meeting because of the
National Meeting in Eugene.
Meeting. June 20-22, 1985, Willamette University
Three invited addresses were given: Donald W. Bushaw of Washington State
University spoke on "The undergraduate curriculum"; Gerald L.
Alexanderson of the University of Santa Clara spoke on "Pictures and
stories from George Pólya's album"; and Wesley L. Nicholson of
Battelle-Northwest gave a talk titled
"Graphical data analysis in more than two dimensions." Four other papers were given as well as a
panel discussion on discrete mathematics.
There were also two minicourses:
"Teaching problem solving" was organized by Alan H.
Schoenfeld, University of California at Berkeley, and "Geometry for college
teachers" was organized by Branko Grünbaum, University of Washington. 70 persons attended the meeting.
At the 1985 meeting at Willamette
University in Salem, Oregon, two old issues were raised. The idea of regional meetings within the
section besides the annual June meeting was discussed. There was interest in publishing a newsletter
again. In June 1986 Chris Meyer and Ken
Batker of Pacific Lutheran University accepted the responsibility of producing
a sectional newsletter. It has been
published regularly since the fall of 1986, and has been well received.
Meeting. June 20, 1986, Southern Oregon State College
Three invited
addresses were given: Paul R. Halmos of
the University of Santa Clara gave two talks, titled "Problems I still
cannot solve" and "Random reminiscences." Joe Buhler of Reed College spoke on
"Finding roots mod p and factoring polynomials." Nine other papers were presented. Joe Buhler also presented a minicourse on
"NP completeness."
Meeting. June 18-20, 1987, Pacific Lutheran University
There were two invited addresses: Donald W. Bushaw of Washington State University
spoke on "Reflections on discrete mathematics in the first two
years," and Branko Grünbaum gave a talk titled "The geometry of
polyhedra." Robert Jewett of
Western Washington University gave the luncheon address on multiplying decimals
that are infinite on the left. There
were five other papers and a panel discussion on intermediate algebra. James Sandefur presented the minicourse
"Discrete mathematics using difference equations." 100 persons attended.
Meeting.
June 18, 1988, University of British Columbia
There were seven invited addresses: Paul Filliman of Western Washington
University spoke on "Symmetry in maximal polytopes"; Richard Guy of
the University of Alberta gave a talk titled "The strong law of small
numbers"; John S. Devitt of the University of Saskatchewan spoke on
"Saskatchewan and the symbolic computation group: unleashing computer algebra on the
mathematics curriculum"; Eric Pearson of Battelle-PN Labs spoke on
"Piecewise analytic methods for solutions of stiff systems of ODE: overview and parallel implementation";
Lynn A. Steen of St. Olaf College gave a talk titled "Numeracy, literacy,
and mathematics"; Nancy Heckman of the University of British Columbia
spoke on "Semi-parametric models"; and Sam Saunders of Washington
State University spoke on "Great expectations or the true odds when
playing the state lotteries."
There were three other talks and a panel
discussion on calculus. Tom Thompson of
Walla Walla College gave a short course titled "Error correcting
codes." There was a heavy emphasis
on calculus at this meeting. At the
Business Meeting it was voted to form a committee 1) to study the current
policies and practices for accrediting secondary mathematics teachers in the
states and provinces within our section; 2) to recommend an appropriate course
of action to the section; and 3) to coordinate implementation of any
recommendations made by the section.80 persons attended.
Meeting. June 15-17, 1989, Gonzaga University
There were seven invited addresses: "Complexity and Robertson/Seymour
theory," by Michael Fellows, University of Idaho; "Random walks
on Z" and
"Factorization in L1 and other places," by Kenneth A. Ross,
University of Oregon; a banquet talk "What are fractals?" by Peter
Renz; "Experimental design in industry," by Andrew Booker, Boeing
Computer Services; "Neural networks in the dynamics of computation,"
by Steve Nobel, Boeing Advanced Systems; and and a luncheon talk
"Mathematics at Boeing," by Stephen P. Keeler, Boeing Computer
Services. A short course on
"Nonlinear dynamics" was given by Philip Holmes, Cornell
University. Fifteen general papers, five
papers on mathematics education, and ten student papers were presented. 127 persons attended and 112 attended the
evening banquet.
Meeting. June 14-16, 1990, Portland State University
Invited Talks were as follows: "Knot theory," by Steven Bleiler,
Portland State University; "Using the HP-28S to teach calculus," by
Tom Dick, Oregon State University; "Chaos," by Donald L. Kreider,
Dartmouth College; a fascinating and entertaining banquet talk"The
geometry of soap bubbles," by Millie Johnson, Western Washington
University; "Computer algebra on the HP-28S," by Charles Patton,
Hewlett-Packard; "The placement problem for very large scale integrated circuits,"
by John Blanks, Mentor Graphics; and a luncheon talk "A non-mathematicians
view of why knot theory is important to DNA research," by Bob Beck, Oregon
Health Sciences University. De Witt Summers,
Florida State University, gave a short course on "Knot theory and
DNA." There was a panel discussion
on "Career opportunities in high-tech industries;" the moderator was
Lewis Lum, University of Portland, and the panel members were: Qwen Blake,
Intel, Balaji Krishnamurthy, Tektronics, and Charles Patton,
Hewlett-Packard. There were 25
contributed papers, including 14 given by students. 111 persons registered for the meeting and 96
attended the banquet.
Meeting. June 20-22, 1991, Seattle Pacific University
This meeting celebrated the centennial
anniversaries of Seattle Pacific University and Seattle University. The scientific presentations were held at
Seattle Pacific and the major evening banquet was hosted by Seattle
University. The banquet speaker was John
Hopcroft, Cornell University, who was an undergraduate at Seattle University;
he spoke on "Entering the information age." Outstanding invited addresses were given by
John Hopcroft, on "Robust geometry algorithms," and by John Ewing,
Indiana University, on "Can we see the Mandelbrot set?" Ramesh Gangolli, University of Washington,
spoke on "New trends in undergraduate mathematics education" at the
Saturday luncheon. A workshop on
"Unsolved problems in intuitive geometry" was given by Victor Klee,
University of Washington. Presentations
on the actuarial profession were given by Mike Kinzer, Safeco Insurance
Company, and by Craig Reynolds, Chief Actuary of Milliman and Robertson, and a
workshop, "An introduction to the TI 81," was conducted by Carl
Swenson, Seattle University. There were
16 contributed papers, including 5 given by students. About 70 persons registered at the meeting
and about 70 attended the banquet.
Meeting. June 18-20, 1992, University of Montana,
Missoula, and The Salish Kootenai College, Pablo, Montana
The high point of this meeting was the
barbecue at The Salish Kootenai College.
This was followed by a very interesting talk on "The life and
legacy of India's greatest mathematician, Srinivasa Ramanujan," by Bruce
Berndt of the University of Illinois.
There was also a presentation of the first PNW Award for Distinguished
Teaching, which was presented to André Yandl of Seattle University. Alan Tucker, SUNY at Stony Brook, gave a very
interesting talk on "The mathematics of fair representation." Walter Mientka, University of Nebraska and
the Executive Director of the American Mathematics Competitions, reported on
"The development, implementation, and results of the American Mathematics
Competions." At the Saturday
luncheon, Howard E. Reinhaardt, University of Montana, gave a very entertaining
account of "What every dean should know about mathematics." William McCallum, University of Arizona, gave
a short course on "Teaching reform calculus;" 32 registered for the short
course. William Hawkins, Director of the
SUMMA Program of the MAA, gave a workshop on "Strengthening
underrepresented minority mathematics achievement," with 20
registrants. There were fifteen papers
presented, including 9 by students.
About 90 people registered at this meeting. There were 69 at the banquet and about 35 at
the Saturday luncheon. The first
sectional Award for Distinguished Teaching of Mathematics was presented to
André Yandl at Seattle University.
Meeting. March 6, 1993, University of Puget Sound,
Tacoma, and Pierce College, Tacoma
This meeting was
historic on two counts. This was the
first meeting not held in June in over thirty years and this was a one-day
meeting. And this was the first meeting
that had a really strong student presence.
Indeed, students were the theme of the meeting. In the first invited address, Ben Fusaro of
Salisbury State University discussed the history of the Mathematical Contest in Modeling (MCM), which he single-handedly brought into being
in the early 1980s. Three MCM teams were
introduced whose members made some brief comments and fielded many
questions. The teams were from the
University of Alaska, University of Puget Sound, and Pacific Lutheran
University. The luncheon banquet speaker
was Frank Morgan of Williams College. He
talked about "Shortest Networks" and many of the results that he
talked about were discovered by undergraduate students. Also at the banquet, the second sectional
Distinguished Teaching Award was presented to Jack Robertson of Washington
State University. The afternoon invited address
was also given by Frank Morgan who talked about "Soap bubble clusters: new
results." Again, many of the
results were discovered by undergraduates.
The program also had very strong sessions of contributed papers,
including reports from the three MCM teams discussed above. In addition to those reports, there were 19
contributed papers, 7 by students. 120
people attended the meeting, including about 40 students.
Meeting. June 16-18, 1994, University of Oregon,
Eugene
This meeting was held in conjunction with
Western Section meeting of the American Mathematical Society. There were three wonderful hour talks. Carl Pomerance, University of Georgia, gave
the first Polya Lecture to be given to the section; he talked about “Witnesses
of composite numbers.” Doris
Schattschneider, Moravian College and First Vice President of the MAA,
addressed the question “Was Escher a mathematician?” Millie J. Johnson, Western Washington University,
spoke on “The mathematics of meanders: rivers, channelization, floods, and the
environment.” The AMS program included a
talk of special interest to MAA members; Karen V. H. Parshall, University of
Virginia, spoke on “Algebras with a Scottish lilt: the life and work of Joseph
H. M. Wedderburn (1882-1948). There were
11 contributed papers and two minicourses.
Jim Tattersall, Providence College in Rhode Island, gave a minicourse on
the “History of the first nine Lucasian professors at Cambridge.” Carl E. Swenson, Seattle University, gave a
minicourse on “Using Mathematica to produce graphical classroom
materials.” Ken Ross, University of
Oregon, moderated a panel discussion on “Sensitivity and understanding of the
job market.” Three department heads and
three “young” mathematicians with recent Ph.D.s served on this panel which
addressed the very tight job market. Stu
Thomas, University of Oregon, moderated a panel discussion titled “The baby and
the bathwater,” which focused on what we
throw out of algebra to make room for technological advances. The issue was whether heavy reliance on
modern technology enhanced or interfered with the learning process. Florence Fasanelli, Director of the SUMMA
Intervention Programs of the MAA, led an “MAA Proposal Writing Workshop.”
About 130 people attended the MAA salmon
bake. The highlight of the evening was
the presentation of the third sectional Distinguished Teaching Award to Millie
Johnson of Western Washington University.
There was also a banquet for University of Oregon alumni and one in
honor of Professor Emeritus David K. Harrison, University of Oregon. There were 229 registrants for the meeting,
including 102 MAA members and 51 students.
The MAA sponsored a free pizza lunch for about 30 students.
Meeting. June 15-17, 1995, Whitman College, Walla
Walla
This meeting was co-hosted by Columbia
Basin College. The meeting celebrated
the section’s fiftieth anniversary and emphasized aspects of mathematical
modeling. There were two invited addresses. Dr. Paul Whitney, Battelle Northwest,
presented a case study showing the interaction between mathematical modeling
and data analysis in analyzing the amount of gas trapped in the nuclear waste
stored in the Hanford tanks. Professor
Martha Siegel, Towson State University and editor of Mathematics Magazine,
spoke on industrial mathematics in the undergraduate curriculum. There were also two minicourses. Professor Maurice Weir, Naval Postgraduate
School, gave a minicourse on the construction of mathematical models. Professor Marcella Laddon, Monterey Peninsula
College, organized a minicourse which examined special topics that can be
taught in elementary and intermediate algebra.
A panel discussion on “Recognition and Rewards in the Mathematical
Sciences” included panelists Martha Siegel, Donald Bentley of Pomona College,
Donald Bushaw of Washington State University, and David Guichard of Whitman
College. The discussion was moderated by
Douglas Underwood of Whitman College.
There were 21 contributed papers, five of which were presented by
students.
The banquet was well attended. The section’s fourth Distinguished Teaching
Award was presented to Richard M. Koch of the University of Oregon. The banquet speech, given by Kenneth A. Ross
of the University of Oregon, focused on some of the lesser known and amusing
events that have occurred in the section in its first fifty years. Persons who have been members of MAA for 25
or more years were honored at the banquet.
There were 78 registrants at the meeting, including 15 students.
Meeting. March 9, 1996, Reed College, Portland
The emphasis of this fine meeting was on
students. Nearly 200 people were in
attendance and about 80 of them were students.
There were three invited lectures.
S. Brent Morris, of the National Security Agency, spoke on “Magic
tricks, card shuffling, and dynamic computer memories.” Arthur Benjamin, of Harvey Mudd College,
spoke on “Mathematical magic with Fibonacci numbers,” and Sam Saunders, of
Washington State University, spoke on “The equation of a sword.” Live demonstrations included magic tricks, cards
and swords. In addition to regular
sessions for faculty and students, there was a session for student projects in
lower division statistics and a session for 1995 Putnam Examination and 1996
COMAP Modeling Competition problem solutions.
Twelve 20-minute talks were given by students, and six were given by
faculty. A panel discussion on “Calculus
Reform: The Next Tier,” included panelists Richard Koch of the University of
Oregon, Jeanette Palmiter of Portland State University, and Mark Utlaut of the
University of the Pacific.
At the banquet lunch, Brent Morris
provided some prestidigitation. The
section’s fifth Distinguished Teaching Award was presented to Janet Ray, who
teaches at Seattle Central Community College.
The day ended with a pizza party for all, at which Arthur Benjamin
demonstrated “The Art of mental calculation.”
Prior to the meeting, Brent Morris conducted an entertaining minicourse
on “The mathematics of the perfect shuffle.”
The question of updating the bylaws of the section, which were last
amended in 1983, was discussed at the meeting of the Executive Committee.
Meeting.
June 19-21, 1997, Western Washington University, Bellingham
The theme of
this meeting was "Forging Links: People, Mathematics, Technology, and
Resources." Among the many
excellent presentations, the highlight was the keynote banquet talk by Tom
Daniel, Professor of Zoology at the University of Washington. Daniel, a distinguished teacher and a
MacArthur Foundation Fellow, spoke on "Motility in Biology: Merging
Mathematics, Mechanics & Molecules."
The presentation was fascinating and he allowed participants to handle
350 million year old fossils.
A subtheme of
the meeting was linear algebra. Roger
Horn, University of Utah and editor of the Mathematical Monthly, gave two fine
hour lectures, one responding to "Why would you want to factor a matrix in
more than one way?" and one on "Eigenvalue inequalities and
equalities." Maria Klawe,
University of British Columbia, gave a very interesting lecture on "How middle
school software provides students with a glimpse at linear algebra
concepts." Tjalling Ypma and
Richard Levin, Western Washington University, gave a minicourse titled,
"Linear algebra using ATLAST Project Materials and Matlab." A panel discussion on "Contemporary
trends in linear algebra instruction" focused on the impact of new
software tools on the teaching of linear algebra. The panelists were Roger Horn of the University of Utah, David
Lay of the University of Maryland, and Steven Leon of the University of
Massachusetts Dartmouth.
At the banquet,
the section's sixth Distinguished Teaching Award was presented to Brian Wick,
University of Alaska – Anchorage. Two
fine talks were given by previous winners of this award. Richard Koch, University of Oregon,
illustrated some of the peculiar things that can happen in "The fourth
dimension." Jack Robertson,
Washington State University, talked about old and new results on cake-cutting
problem using various definitions of "fair." A minicourse on "Designing mathematical
animations with Excel" was organized by Chuck Stevens, Skagit Valley
College. Joe Fiedler, California State
University-Bakersfield, gave a presentation titled, "Yes, but what have
you done for me lately: beyond the TI-92," and Eric Schultz, Walla Walla Community College,
ran a workshop on "The TI-92: More than a graphing calculator." Earl Fife, Calvin College and co-director of
the Mathematics Archives, introduced participants to the archives during a
hands-on session titled, "Using the Internet constructively in mathematics
education."
There was a panel discussion on how to
get a job, "Putting your best foot forward--career search." The panelists were Jill McKenney, Lane
Community College, and Tina Litzinger and Don Gorman of Western Washington
University. There were 28 other
presentations, including some outstanding student presentations, many of which
reflected the themes of the meeting.
There were 112 registrants at the meeting including about 30 students,
ten of whom gave talks.
Meeting.
June 18-20, 1998, Washington State University, Pullman
The theme of this meeting was
Differential Equations. There was a
balanced program of content and pedagogy with a session on inclusive teaching
strategies and an invited address by two Portland high school teachers who are
including dynamical systems in their classrooms under an NSF grant. The high school teachers were Diana Fisher,
Franklin High School, and Ron Zaraza, Wilson High School. An invited address on “The role of modeling in
the introductory ODE course” was given by Robert Borrelli, Harvey Mudd
College. Another invited address was
given by Robert O’Malley, Jr., University of Washington; the title of his
lecture was “Giving your ODE course a single perturbation.” A panel discussion addressed issues in the
teaching of differential equations. The
panel participants were Robert Borrelli, Don Bushaw, Diana Fisher, Robert
O’Malley, and Ron Zaraza. There were two
workshops given by Kevin Cooper and Thomas LaForo of Washington State
University. One of them was on “Differential equations instruction using
technology,” and the other was on “Using Mathematica in the calculus
classroom.”
There were three other outstanding
invited addresses. Mark Nielsen,
University of Idaho, spoke on “Inscribing figures in curves--A short tour of an
old problem.” Ron Graham of AT&T
Labs, and past president of the AMS, spoke on “Juggling permutations of the
integers.” This was followed by a
juggling lesson. Paul Zorn, editor of
Mathematics Magazine, reported on “Math Mag morsels.” In addition, Sandra Cooper, Kimberly Vincent
and Judy Meuth of Washington State University organized a collaborative session
on “Inclusive teaching strategies in mathematics.” There were 18 other presentations, including
six by students. For the first time,
there was a student paper competition with cash awards given for the three best
papers. Contributions from the host
institution made this possible. Also,
Matt Hudelson, Washington State University, and Janet Ray, Seattle Central
Community College, presided over an informal session titled “Your mathematical
career--Off to a good start,” which included a report about Project NExT. The invited speaker for the banquet was Don Bushaw
of Washington State University, who spoke on “The demoniac and the
determinant.” There were 101 attendees,
including 26 students.
Meeting. March 12-13, 1999, Willamette University,
Salem, Oregon
This meeting, which was well-attended by
students, featured three outstanding speakers.
Peter Hilton, SUNY Binghamton, spoke on “New wine in old bottles: recent
results on divisibility of Fibonacci and Lucas numbers.” He also gave the Saturday lunch address on,
“Reminiscences of a codebreaker,” a fascinating account of his work with Alan
Turing on code-breaking during World War II.
Jonathan Borwein, Simon Fraser University, gave a fascinating
philosophical presentation titled, “Experimental mathematics: insight from
computation.” He also gave the Saturday
dinner address on “Why pi?” Millie Johnson,
Western Washington University, gave an invited address titled, “Why do dogs
have wet noses and other mathematical insights into animal physiology:
breathing, swimming, flying, ...”
There were 21 sessions of contributed
papers, including 10 given by students.
There was also a student session led by the section’s Student Chapters
Coordinator, Steven Johnson, Seattle Pacific University. There was a panel discussion on “Issues in
K-12 education -- and what it has to do with us at the college level.” The panelists were Barbara Edwards, Oregon
State University; Marjorie Enneking, Portland State University; and Kenneth A.
Ross, University of Oregon. There was
also a presentation on “Web-based mathematics courses” given by Tim Merzenich,
Chemeketa Community College; Steve Perry, Shoreline Community College; and Dick
Schori, Oregon State University.
At the business meeting, it was observed
that the experiment with March meetings every three years, which are more
accessible to students, has been a big success.
It was decided to modify the scheduling of meetings so that the March
meetings occur every two years.
Specifically, it was agreed to schedule them on the following four-year
rotation, starting with the current meeting:
March meeting in Willamette Valley, June meeting west of the Cascades,
March meeting in Puget Sound, June meeting east of the Cascades. The section’s Award for Distinguished College
or University Teaching was presented to Professor Ping-Tung Chang of
Matanuska-Susitna College, University of Alaska-Anchorage. It is possible that this is the first such
sectional award in the country where the winner was nominated by HIS
STUDENTS. There were 140 attendees,
including 68 students.
Meeting.
June 15-17, 2000, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British
Columbia
The program included lectures honoring
Ivan Niven (1915-1999), Past President of the MAA and two-time Governor of the
section. Kenneth A. Ross, University of
Oregon, gave “A tribute to Ivan Niven” and Hugh Montgomery, University of
Michigan, spoke on “Experimental modes for teaching number theory.” Ross’s talk included a report on Niven’s
famous one-page proof of the irrationality of pi; Montgomery clarified the
ideas and added comments about the proof that pi is transcendental. Ivan’s widow, Betty Niven, and son, Scott
Niven, attended these talks.
There were several outstanding invited
lectures concerning the impact of technology on mathematics education. William McCallum, University of Arizona,
spoke on “The effect of computer algebra systems on mathematics
education.” Thomas F. Banchoff, Brown
University and President of the MAA, demonstrated how the web has become an
effective tool in the dissemination of mathematics and mathematical ideas. He also gave the Friday banquet speech, where
he expanded on these ideas in the context of the preparation of the electronic
Mathematics Awareness Month poster.
Cristina Conati, University of British Columbia, reported on experiments
“Toward intelligent computer-based support of meta-cognitive, learning
skills.” Jonathan Borwein, Simon Fraser
University and President-Elect of the Canadian Mathematical Society, gave a
report on “Numerical and computational mathematics at the undergraduate
level.” Marjorie Enneking, Portland State
University, spoke on the importance of universal involvement in “The
preparation of future teachers.”
There was a panel discussion on student
competitions, both at the high school and college level. There was also a display of some student
projects that were winners in the FAME competition in mathematics at the
secondary school level on Vancouver Island.
Several students of Larry Anderson and Russell Gordon at Whitman College
gave excellent presentations on their mathematics projects. They were Todd Combs, Colin C. Ferguson, Marc
Kepler, Aimee Taylor and Elisabeth Wood.
Other 20-minute presentations were given by Russell A. Gordon, Whitman
College, James D. Harper, Central Washington University, Kenneth A. Ross,
University of Oregon, and Andre Yandl, Seattle University.
The main meeting was preceded by two
minicourses. Hugh Montgomery, University
of Michigan, gave “An introduction to computational number theory,” and Michael
Monagan, Simon Fraser University, organized a course on “Applications of
MAPLE.” The first PNW Project NExT
session was organized by Jennifer McNulty.
Presentations were given by Brian Thomas Gill, Seattle Pacific
University,
Meeting. April 6-7, 2001,
Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, Washington
Much
of the main program on Saturday was designed for students, but the program was
fun for everyone. There were four excellent invited talks. Aparna Higgins,
University of Dayton, gave an entertaining talk at the luncheon on
"Pebbling, Demonic Graphs and Undergraduate Research." The banquet
speaker was Colin Adams, Williams College, who gave demonstrations on
"Making Calculus Fun: How to Entertain at Parties." Adams' notorious
brother-in-law, Mel Slugbate, reported on "Real Estate in Hyperbolic
Space: Investment Opportunities for the New Millennium." Curtis Tuckey, of
Oracle, gave an interesting talk on "Some Internet Stuff That Could Be
Mathematics." There were twenty-two 15-minute presentations of papers.
Eleven of the presentations were by students, including an excellent one by
Eric Malm, a high school student at Saint George's School near Spokane. There
were two panel discussions, "Conversations on the changing face of the
mathematics major," organized by Michael Boardman, and "Graduate
School in Mathematics: Personal Perspectives," moderated by Jenny McNulty.
Panelists of the second panel were graduate students from various institutions
in our section. In addition, Doug Mooers of Whatcom Community College gave a
presentation about Online Math Center, a free online resource for teachers,
students, and anyone interested in mathematics.
The
second PNW Project NExT session was held on Friday and organized by Jennifer
McNulty. Presentations were given by Sharon Allen-Felton, Director of
Counseling, Bellevue Community College; DeWayne Derryberry, University of Puget
Sound; Brian Gill, Seattle Pacific University; Jennifer Laveglia, Bellevue
Community College;
Meeting. June 20-22, 2002,
Portland State University, Portland, Oregon
This
meeting was held jointly with the Western Section of the American Mathematical
Society. Kenneth A. Ribet, University of
California Berkeley, gave the joint AMS-MAA Invited Address; he spoke on,
“Modular curves and their twisted analogues.”
There were two MAA Invited Addresses.
Tina H. Straley, Executive Director of the MAA, reported on “The MAA’s
role in the future of undergraduate mathematics.” Jim Valerio, Intel Desktop Architectural Lab,
spoke on, “Improving PC graphics.” The
MAA Banquet Speaker was Edward B. Burger, Williams College, who discussed,
“Innovative Experiments . . . and how I survived them.” Ed Burger also organized one of the
minicourses, “What to Teach and How Not to Teach it.” The other minicourse, “Senior Capstones:
Meaningful Closure to the Undergraduate Experience,” was organized by Dusty E.
Sabo and Kemble R. Yates, Southern Oregon University.
Other
MAA sessions were: a Special Address by
the PNW-MAA Teaching Award Winner, Andrew Chiang-Fung Liu, University of
Alberta. A presentation, “Mathematically
Inspired, Computer Generated Art,” by Jeffrey Ely, Lewis and Clark
College. A session on “Innovations in
Teaching Undergraduates,” organized by Monte Boisen, University of Idaho. A session on “Mathematics Education
Research,” organized by Barbara Edwards, Oregon State University, and Sam Hall,
Willamette University. A session, “On
Undergraduate Research Programs that Work,” organized by Daniel Kim, Southern
Oregon University. A session on, “The
Use of Technology in Community College Mathematics Courses,” organized by Peter
Haberman, Portland Community College. A
session, “Junior Faculty on their Research, organized by Jennifer Ann
Firkins. And a “Special Presentation on
Assessment,” by Bonnie Gold, Monmouth University, who represented SAUM,
Supporting Assessment in Undergraduate Mathematics, an NSF-supported project. There were two general sessions of papers,
with nine presenters, and a session consisting of six presentations by
undergraduates.
In
addition to elections of officers, two important decisions were authorized at
the Business Meeting. A first-ever
section meeting in Alaska was approved for mid June of 2004. Several bylaw changes were approved that had
been prepared by the Bylaws Committee, chaired by Jenny McNulty. The total attendance figure of 276 may be
the highest at a meeting of this section. Attendance at the MAA portion of the meeting
was 147 of which 24 were students. Andrew
Chiang-Fung Liu, University of Alberta, won the section's distinguished
teaching award. He also won the
nationwide Debbie Haimo Teaching Award in January 2004.
Meeting. June 19-21, 2003, Whitman
College, Walla Walla, Washington
There were four
invited addresses. Mike Beanland,
TriAxis Engineering, spoke on "Wind + electricity + engineer = Number
crunching!" C. W. Groetsch,
University of Cincinnati, spoke about "Two gentlemen of Verona: An early
episode in ballistics." Allan
Rossman and Beth Chance, California Polytechnic State University, lectured on
"Teaching statistical inference: Activities and assessment." The banquet speaker was the national MAA
speaker, Underwood Dudley of DePauw University.
He talked about "Calculus books," pointing out that this is a
weighty subject.
The meeting was
preceded by a program for the PNW Project NexT Fellows. Eric Schultz, Walla Walla Community College,
organized a minicourse on "Visual Linear Algebra." Beth Chance and Allan Rossman, California
Polytechnic State University, organized a minicourse on "Teaching
introductory statistics with data and activities." Eleven papers were presented in general
sessions. In addition, nine papers were
presented in undergraduate sessions, six were presented in an "early
career faculty session," and six were presented in a session focused on
"teaching innovations in multivariable calculus courses."
At the banquet,
Steven A. Bleiler, Portland State University, was awarded the section's
distinguished teaching award. In
addition, Larry Curnutt of Bellevue Community College was recognized as a 25
year member of the MAA. Most of the
Business Meeting was devoted to a discussion of plans for the meeting in
Anchorage, Alaska, in June 2004. There
were 101 people in attendance, including 93 members of the MAA and 15 students.
Meeting. June 24-26, 2004,
University of Alaska Anchorage, Anchorage, Alaska
This
was an historic meeting, being the first section meeting in Alaska. So far as we know, this is the first
mathematics meeting in Alaska. I. Martin
Isaacs, of the University of Wisconsin, gave one of the hour addresses; he
spoke on “Dirty Children, Unfaithful Husbands and Similar Problems.” Kenneth A. Ross, University of Oregon, spoke
about “Two Vexing, though Unimportant, Problems.” Ronald L. Graham, University of California at
San Diego and MAA President, gave the banquet talk; see below.
For
its fifth year, the section’s Project NexT had sessions prior to the regular
part of the meeting. There were also
three minicourses. “What Are Your Math
Majors Learning?” was organized by Marj Enneking and Paul Latiolais of Portland
State University. The minicourse
“Earthmath: Classroom Projects with Environmental Applications,” was given by
Paul Latiolais, and “Bridging the Gap Between Mathematics and the Physical
Sciences” was presented by Tevian Dray of Oregon State University.
There
were three special sessions as follows.
David M. Bressoud of Macalester College organized a session on CUPM, the
MAA Committee on the Undergraduate Program in Mathematics. Bernard Madison, University of Arkansas, and
Dale Oliver, Humboldt State University, organized a session on the PMET
(Preparing Mathematicians to Educate Teachers).
And Caren Diefenderfer, Hollins University, and Bernard Madison
organized a session on Quantitative Literacy.
The traditional banquet was held in the
elegant Hotel Captain Cook. Ron Graham,
President of the MAA, gave an interesting banquet talk entitled, “The
Stomachion of Archimedes.” There were 34
contributed papers, some in sessions focused on Quantitative Literacy, Discrete
Mathematics, Teaching Mathematics, Applied Mathematics, and a
geographically-appropriate session on Math of the North. Two of the papers were
excellent presentations given by students.
At
the Business Meeting, Stuart Boersma of Central Washington University was
elected Chair-elect. Jenny McNulty was
reappointed Project NexT Coordinator.
Curtis Feist of Southern Oregon University was elected Student Program
Coordinator; he replaces Jennifer Firkins Nordstrom. There was discussion about the scheduling
cycle for our meetings. The tentative
schedule for the next few meetings is:
Spring 2005, University of Puget Sound; June 2006, Southern Oregon University;
Spring 2007, populated area; June 2008, Carroll College in Montana. The new Local Arrangements Chair will be Rob
Beezer, and the new Program Chair for Universities and Four-year Colleges is
Nancy Neudauer at Pacific University.
Douglas F. Mooers of Whatcom Community College received the section’s
distinguished teaching award. There were
123 people at the meeting, including 13 students.
Meeting, April 1-2, 2005, University of
Puget Sound, Tacoma, Washington
There were three
invited speakers. Frank Farris, Santa
Clara University, and Editor, Mathematics Magazine, gave an interesting and
exciting talk on “Forbidden Symmetry—relaxing the crystallographic
restriction.” Jenny Quinn, Occidental
College, and Co-Editor, Math Horizons, talked about “Proofs that really
count.” Keith Devlin, Stanford
University, and National Public Radio's Math Guy, addressed the question, “How
much mathematics can be for all?” He
also gave the banquet talk on “Using math to beat the casino, which was
well-received. There were two
minicourses: "Combinatorially
Thinking," organized by Jenny Quinn, Occidental College; and
"Teaching Linear Algebra with Technology," organized by Jenny
McNulty, University of Montana. There
were several sessions of contributed papers, including a student paper session,
a session of junior faculty research talks, and general paper sessions. There was also a stimulating student problem
solving session. There were Project NExT
sessions on Friday morning.
The section’s
distinguished teaching award was presented to Chris Meyer of Pacific Lutheran
University. Students and student
participation were a major part of the meeting.
In fact, there were 130 students in attendance. At the Business Meeting it was noted that
there will be a $3000-4000 deficit due to partially subsidizing so many
students; only 40 were anticipated.
There were 120 faculty in attendance.
Jenny McNulty agreed to create a meeting evaluation form for future
meetings.
Meeting, June 22-24, 2006, Southern
Oregon University, Ashland, Oregon
There were three
invited speakers. Donald Saari,
University of California at Irvine, spoke on “The Chaotic Evolution of Newton’s
Universe.” Jim Tattersall, Providence
College and Associate Secretary of the MAA, talked about “Episodes in the Early
History of the Lucasian Chair.” Rob
Beezer, University of Puget Sound and outgoing Governor of the section,
lectured on “Cheats, Liars, Posers and Thieves: cryptographic protocols for
insecure networks.” Donald Saari was
also the banquet speaker; he talked about “The Power and Beauty of
Mathematics.”
There were two
minicourses Thursday afternoon. Donald
Saari organized one on the “Mathematics of Voting.” Duane DeTemple, Washington State University,
presented the other minicourse, “Using the Geometer’s Sketchpad in Teaching and
Research.” Project NExT sessions were
held Thursday morning. There were seven
eight sessions of contributed papers with a total of about 37 papers. There was also a presentation about the Texas
Instrument TI-84.
The section’s
distinguished teaching award was presented to Jim Morrow, University of
Washington. There were 114 total
participants at the meeting. Of those,
86 were MAA members and 15 were students.
Meeting, April 13-14, 2007, Linfield
College, McMinnville, Oregon
Friday evening,
John Conway, Princeton University, gave a lecture established by the Walter P.
Dyke Endowment at Linfield College. This
rather philosophical lecture was about “The Free Will Theorem,” which proves that
if there exist experimenters having a certain amount of free will, then
elementary particles must already enjoy their own small share of this valuable
commodity. John Conway also gave a
fascinating invited address following the banquet, entitled “Infinite and
Infinitesimal Numbers and Games.” Other
invited addresses were given by Elwyn Berlekamp, University of California at
Berkeley, who spoke on “Fibonacci Plays Billiards,” and by David Wolfe of
Gustavus Adolphus College whose talk as “In Tribute to Martin Gardiner.
Project NExT met
on Friday, and there were also two minicourses on Friday. One was “A Tour of Combinatorial Games” was
presented by Elwyn Berlekamp and David Wolfe.
The other provided “An Approach to Population and Biological Modeling
for Pre- and Post- Calculus Students;” this minicourse was organized by Sharon
Brown and Chris Dugaw, Humboldt State University. There was a Community College Panel on
Saturday afternoon.
There were
thirteen sessions of contributed papers, and 40 of the 74 papers were presented
by students. The section’s distinguished teaching award was presented to Duane
DeTemple, Washington State University. There were 260 registrants, including 112 MAA members, 97
undergraduates and 23 graduate students.
Meeting,
June 19-21, 2008, Carroll College, Helena, Montana
There were three invited speakers. Joe Gallian, from University of
Minnesota-Duluth and President of the MAA, spoke about “Using groups and graphs
to create symmetry patterns.” The
methods that he described were used to create the image of the 2003 Mathematics
Awareness Month poster. Sarah
Greenwald, Appalachian State University, gave an entertaining presentation,
“Good News Everyone! Mathematical
Morsels from the Simpsons and Futurama.”
Ivars Peterson, MAA Director of Publications for Journals and
Communications, narrated “A Knotty Tale: From Vortex Atoms to DNA
Tangles.” He also reported on “Soap
Bubbles in Math, Science, and Art” at the Friday banquet.
There were two minicourses.
Kelly Cline, Mark Parker, and Holly Zullo, all from Carroll College,
offered a course on “Active Learning Through Classroom Voting and
Clickers.” Also, Sarah Greenwald offered
one entitled, “Math is Not Only a Young Man’s Game,” which focused on an overview recent studies
regarding perceptions and success in mathematics, and on ideas how these
studies can help in the classroom.
There were eight sessions of contributed papers, including
one devoted to student presentations.
At the Business Meeting, it was noted that the Board of Governors has asked
the section to rewrite the portion of the bylaws pertaining to a quorum.
Meeting, April 3-4, 2009, Central
Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington
This short, but full,
meeting included three invited speakers.
On Friday evening, Stan Wagon, from Macalester College, gave a
fascinating report on “Impossible, Unbelievable… but True Results of
Mathematics.” He also gave an
after-banquet talk on “A Computational View of the Four-Color Problem for
Planar Maps.” George Andrews, at
Pennsylvania State University and AMS President, gave a wonderful Polya Lecture
on “The Lost Notebook of Ramanujan.”
William Stein, of the University of Washington, reported on his
creation, Sage software; the title of the talk was “Open Source Mathematical
Software.”
Three minicourses were
offered on Friday. George Andrews
organized one on “Theory of Partitions;” William Stein organized one titled
“Using Sage to Spice up your Undergraduate Courses;” and Stan Wagon gave an
“Introduction to Mathematica for Mathematicians.” There was also a Project NexT meeting and a
dinner & discussion. A student
reception included pizza and the movie, “Flatland.”
There were eight
sessions of contributed papers, including three on undergraduate research and
one on junior-faculty research. There
was also a student poster session, involving students from Spokane (Gonzaga and
Whitworth Universities).
New officers and
upcoming section meetings were discussed at the Executive Committee
meeting. The 2010 meeting with be at
Seattle University, April 9-10. The 2011
meeting will be in Juneau, Alaska, from June 23-25. It was noted that we could improve publicity
among students if we used the language “Undergraduate Conference.” The 2012 meeting will be in April, somewhere
west of the Cascades. Some section
newsletters include advertising; this will be looked into. The question of streamlining the organization
of meetings was discussed. Jennifer
Nordstrom and Nancy Neudauer agreed to update an old manual created by Ken Ross
in 2002.
At the Business Meeting,
outgoing (!) Governor Nancy Neudauer gave a very thorough report about what’s
going on in the MAA at the national level.
Some bylaw changes were approved without opposition; they include a statement
that a business-meeting quorum is 15, which was satisfied at this meeting. At the banquet, certificates were presented
to people who have been members of MAA for twenty-five years or for fifty
years. Also, it was announced that
Thomas P. Dick, at Oregon State University, received the section’s
Distinguished Teaching Award. There were 201
attendees, including 102 students and 83 non-student MAA members.