MAA MD-DC-VA Section
Spring 2002 Meeting
April 12 and 13


 
 

NEW

The abstracts for the contributed paper are now available. Click HERE.



Program Highlights
Program Details
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This page last updated 4/11/2002


 
 

Program Highlights

The spring meeting of the MD/DC/VA Section of the MAA will be held April 12 and 13 at St. Mary's College of Maryland, St. Mary's City, MD. Click here for information about the campus and region. The program features two invited speakers as well as an invited panel. Dr. Brian Hayes, who writes the Computing Science column for American Scientist magazine, will be the guest speaker for the banquet dinner on Friday night. On Saturday, Prof. George Francis of the University of Illinois will speak about his research on computer graphics. The panel, organized by Professors Caren Diefenderfer and Trish Hammer of Hollins College, is on Quantitative Reasoning as it applies to mathematics courses as well as other disciplines.

At the business meeting, some new officers will be elected. Click here for details.

 
 
 
 

Featured Speakers

On the Teeth of Wheels: A Story about a Clockmaker, a Number Theorist and a Reward of $2.56

Brian Hayes
Author and Writer on Mathematics and Related Subjects

Abstract: Until recently, the raw material for building computational machinery was not silicon but brass. Two thousand years ago an elaborate train of brass gears drove a calendrical computer called the Antikythera Mechanism, and the same basic technology of toothed wheels was still ascendant when Charles Babbage designed his calculating engines in Victorian England. Through such devices, gearwork has contributed to the computational branches of mathematics, but knowledge has flowed in the other direction as well, because mathematical tools are needed to make gears that mesh properly. This talk will discuss a moment in the late 19th century when gear grinders and mathematicians had a particularly close encounter. A German number theorist and a French clockmaker -- each unaware of the other's work -- conceived a mathematical structure now called the Stern-Brocot tree. That structure was an essential ingredient in a theorem proved at the very end of the 20th century.
 
 

Biographical Sketch: Brian Hayes writes the Computing Science column for American Scientist magazine. Formerly he was the editor of American Scientist, and earlier still was a writer for and editor of Scientific American. In 1999 he was Journalist in Residence at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley. His article "Clock of Ages" in "The Sciences" recently won a National Magazine Award as the best essay of 1999. Later this year he will spend a semester at the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste, Italy.

When he is not writing about mathematics and computer science, Hayes is at work on an illustrated book titled "Infrastructures: A Field Guide to the Industrial Landscape", to be published by W. W. Norton. He is a member of the MAA and the AMS, a Fellow of the AAAS, and an honorary life member of Sigma Xi. A list of his recent publications, with links to articles is at: http://www.amsci.org/amsci/other/BPH.html
 
 

. . .

The Geometrical Puppetshow
George Francis
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Abstract: Skiing at relativistic speeds, dodging a gravitational lens, flying through hyperbolic space, viewing a sphere turning itself inside out (from inside and out), these are just some of the ways of using computer graphics to simulate "impossible" phenomena. Impossible to render in a photo-realistic manner, such mathematical ideas are conveyed meta-realistically in these puppetshows.

What corresponds to the wood, cloth, paint, and baubles of puppets is the graphics hardware and its programming languages. The puppet itself is a real-time interactive computer animation. The puppeteer is a student or alumnus of my courses, teacher institutes, research experiences for undergraduates, projects etc. Sometimes, the stage is as grand as the CAVE or the CUBE virtual environments, or a videotape shown at international conferences, like the "Optiverse", or even a talk to a friendly audience. But mostly, we put on our puppetshows to understand homotopies, 4-D phenomena, non-Euclidean geometry and other hard to imagine stuff.

This presentation is accessible to general audiences. It includes videos and live computer animation, and is supported by websites and software that can be downloaded to popular PC platforms.

Biographical Sketch: George Francis is professor of Mathematics and the Campus Honors Program, and senior research scientist at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He received his BSmcl from Notre Dame in 1958, an AM from Harvard in 1960, and the PhD in mathematics from the University of Michigan in 1967. Honors include: Woodrow Wilson Fellowship (1959), Lloyd Postdoctoral Fellow (1968) and the Amoco Award for Innovation in Undergraduate Instruction (1994). He is a member of SIAM.

His research is in mathematics, computer science, education in science and mathematics, and history of the calculus. Math topics include: descriptive topology, geometry, Riemann surfaces and control theory. The computer graphics research includes visual mathematics and dynamical systems. Combining research and education, he has involved undergraduates in his research. Among many results is his development of the CAVE, a virtual reality theater. His book, "A Topological Picturebook" (Springer-Verlag, 1987) has been translated into Russian and Japanese.

Prof. Francis has been teaching graduate and undergraduate courses in geometrical computer graphics. His "illiView" team of students presented the "Etruscan Venus" in the Interactive Image exhibit at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry, "A post-Euclidean Walkabout" in the CAVE virtual reality theater at Siggraph'94, the "Laterna mathMagica" on the at Supercomputing'95, and "Superball" at Supercompting'98. The sphere eversion video, "The Optiverse", was shown at Siggraph'98, and the International Congress of Mathematicians, Berlin. Prints of his work hang on the wall of the Director of Mathematical Sciences, NSF, Washington, DC. Prof. Francis's most industrious and appreciated collaborators are the undergraduate students who work with him. With them he has developed the "Audible Sketchpad for the CAVE" at the NCSA, and "illiMath2001" in his department.
 
 

. . .




Panel on Quantitative Reasoning (QR)
Caren Diefenderfer and Trish Hammer
Hollins University

The National Council on Education and the Disciplines (NCED) has recently published "Mathematics and Democracy: The Case for Quantitative Literacy." This document cites the quantitative reasoning program at Hollins University as one of nine exemplary national programs addressing important quantitative literacy issues. The Hollins program, "Quantitative Reasoning (QR) Across the Curriculum", consists of a QR Basic Skills requirement and a QR Applied Skills requirement. The goal of the program is to ensure that all Hollins graduates have not only a mastery of basic quantitative reasoning skills but also an appreciation for how these skills apply to the liberal arts curriculum.

With the support of the National Science Foundation, Hollins professors Caren Diefenderfer and Trish Hammer have led the Hollins community in QR activities during 2000-2001. Main focus has been on faculty development of Applied QR courses. Hollins now has 37 such courses. They are in: art, biology, business, chemistry, classics, computer science, economics, history, math, philosophy, physics, political science, psychology, sociology, statistics, theatre, and women's studies.

Panelists will give an overview of the very successful QR program at Hollins, discuss creative applications of quantitative reasoning, and evaluate experiences in learning about QR through a series of NSF funded workshops. In addition to Diefenderfer and Hammer, the panel includes Hollins professors Christina Salowey of Classical Studies and Andre Spies of History.

Biographical Sketch: Caren Diefenderfer (left in photo), Associate Professor of Mathematics, joined the Hollins faculty in 1977. Her scholarly interests involve cryptanalysis, applications of linear algebra and computer graphics. She is currently working with a senior on connections between mathematics and music. The paper investigates the Pythagorean scale and its relationship to the equal temperament scale. Diefenderfer received her A.B. from Dartmouth and her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of California in Santa Barbara.

Prof. Diefenderfer has been active in MAA activities for many years. She was the Secretary and Newsletter Editor of our section from 1982-1985. She participated in the IMTP (Interactive Mathematics Text Project) of the MAA in 1993 and was chosen to be a developer of interactive texts. Presently, she is serving a second term on the Quantitative Literacy subcommittee of CUPM.

Other professional activities include work with Sigma Xi and the College Board. Diefenderfer has been a faculty consultant, table leader and exam leader at the AP Calculus reading during the past 15 years. See http://www1.hollins.edu/homepages/diefenderfercl/homepage.htm for more information.
 
 

Biographical Sketch: Trish Hammer (right in photo), Associate Professor of Mathematics, joined the Hollins faculty in 1990. Her scholarly interests involve mathematical modeling in several disciplines including medicine, biology, physiology, and physics. Her current work involves parameter identification in modeling of the wolf and moose populations on Isle Royale. Other work in parameter identification in partial differential equations has appeared in the Journal of Mathematical Systems, Estimation, and Control and in the MAPLE Technical Newsletter. Hammer received her B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in mathematics from Virginia Tech.

She is actively involved in the development of a quantitative reasoning (QR) across the curriculum program at Hollins. With Professor Caren L. Diefenderfer, she received an NSF grant for 2000-2002. This grant supported on campus visits by outside QR scholars as well as follow-up QR workshops during which Hollins faculty developed applied quantitative reasoning courses.

Prof. Hammer teaches a variety of undergraduate courses including real analysis, transition to advanced mathematics, calculus, differential equations, linear algebra, precalculus, and a senior seminar course which include such topics as glottochronology (dating languages), fractals, chaos, mathematical models of blood cell populations, predator-prey populations and cryptanalysis. See http://www1.hollins.edu/homepages/hammerpw/homepage.htm for more information.

. . .

Program Highlights
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Program Details



The Friday dinner and talk will be in the Daugherty-Palmer Commons (DPC). All Saturday sessions occur in Schaefer Hall. The lunch will be in DPC. Click here for a campus map.
 

NEW

The abstracts for the contributed paper are now available. Click HERE.

Friday, April 12, 2002 All Friday events are in Daugherty-Palmer Hall

Time

Location

Event

6:00 - 7:00 PM

Lobby

Registration and Refreshments

7:00 - 9:00 PM

 

Dinner and Invited Address: Brian Hayes, American Scientist Magazine, On the Teeth of Wheels: A Story about a Clockmaker, a Number Theorist and a Reward of $2.56

Saturday, April 13, 2002 All events are in Schaefer Hall except lunch in Daugherty-Palmer Hall

Time

Location

Event

8:15 - 10:00 AM

Lobby

Registration and Refreshments

8:30 AM - 2:00 PM

 

Book Displays and Sale

8:30 - 8:40 AM

106

Welcoming Remarks: Dr. Jane Margaret O'Brien, President, St. Mary's College of MD

8:45 - 9.05 AM

 

Contributed Papers 1 @=undergraduate *=presenter

 

111

Aileen Cuddy and *George Mackiw, Loyola College of Maryland
Extending the Error Correcting Capabilities of the ISBN Code

 

132

Dipa Choudhury, Loyola College of Maryland
Matrix Factorization

 

134

G. Edgar Parker, James Madison University
Some Issues in Teaching Mathematics to Prospective
Elementary and Middle School Teachers

 

161

@ Mary R. Lee, James Madison University
Asymptotic Analysis of an Inward Point Load Acting on a Half Space: a nonlinearly elastic near-load model

9:10 - 9.30 AM

 

Contributed Papers 2 @=undergraduate *=presenter

 

111

Ezra Brown, Virginia Tech
Square Roots from 1;24,51,10 to Dan Shanks

 

132

William P. Wardlaw, U. S. Naval Academy
Factoring Polynomials with Matrices

 

134

Karen Z. Benbury, Bowie State University
Problems from the History of Probability

 

161

@ J. Brandon Coates, Hampden-Sydney College
Cwatsets and Two-Dimensional Cell Complexes

9:35 - 10.30 AM

106

Invited Address: Prof. George Francis, University of Illinois
Geometrical Puppetshows: Real-time Interactive Computer Animation

10:35 - 10.55 AM

 

Contributed Papers 3 @=undergraduate *=presenter

 

111

Carol G. Crawford and Mark D. Meyerson, U. S. Naval Academy
Interactive Web Based Labs for the U.S. Naval Academy - Real World Applications Designed with Java for the 3-semester Calculus Sequence

 

132

James Case, Consultant
Concerning the Redesign of Baseball's Postseason Playoff Format

 

134

Mihaela Malita, St. Mary's College of Maryland
Logical Puzzles in Prolog

 

161

@ Kevin Beanland, St. Mary's College of Maryland
Regular Polytopes in Four Dimensions

11:00 - 11.20 AM

 

Contributed Papers 4 @=undergraduate *=presenter

 

111

Conrad Lotze, Towson University
Online Math Tutoring

 

132

Gheorghe Stefan, St. Mary's College of Maryland
Revisiting the History of Mathematics in a Computer Science perspective. A Case Study

 

161

@ Kelly I. Dickson, James Madison University
The Modified Picard Method for Singular Problems

 

165

@ Mihaela Guberovic, Virginia Military Institute
Ceva's Theorem and Its Applications

 

134

Mieczyslaw K. Dabkowski, George Washington University
Burnside obstraction to the Montesinos-Nakanishi 3-move conjecture

11:25 - 11.45 AM

 

Contributed Papers 5 @=undergraduate *=presenter

 

111

Ilhan M. Izmirli, Strayer University
Two Dimensional Arrays of Pitch Classes

 

132

George Rublein, William and Mary
Quantitative Literacy at William and Mary

 

161

@ Danilo N. Machado*, Charles R. Johnson, Patrick X. Rault, William and Mary
Multiplicative Generation of Integral Matrices via Elementary Bidiagonal Matrices

 

165

@ Lois Simon, Morgan State University
Math Model of Airflow Propagation through Non-Uniform Materials

 

109

(MCM Outstanding Winner) Andrew Carroll, Victoria Chiou, and Jessamyn Liu
Where's the Scrub? Aye There's the Rub. - Environmental Management of the Florida Scrub Lizard

11:50 - 1:00 PM

 

Lunch in Daugherty-Palmer Hall

1:05 - 2:35 PM

106

Panel on Quantitative Reasoning (QR) Organized by Caren Diefenderfer and Trish Hammer of Hollins University, with Christina Salowey, (Classical Studies) and Andre Spies (History) also from Hollins.

1:05 - 1:25 PM

109

(MCM Meritorious) Philip O'Brien, Margaret Olson, and Art Vilassakdanont
No Shows, No Seats, No Dice - Airline Overbooking and Future Cost Repercussions

1:30 - 1:55 PM

109

(MCM Meritorious) Jonathan Charlesworth, Garrett Urban, and Jeb Ware
Optimal Airline Booking Strategies Under Various Demand Situations

2:00 - 2:20 PM

109

(MCM Outstanding Winner) Lyric Doshi, Philip Kidd, and Joseph Gonzalez
A Dry Solution - A Study in Fountain Control

2:45 - 3:30 PM

106

Business Meeting & Awards

Program Highlights

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Student Information

Students are encouraged to attend the section meeting. The section will host a student paper competition, and will provide travel support to the winning speaker to attend Mathfest 2002, in Burlington, VT August 1-3. Details for other student activities are still in the planning stages at this point, so check back here closer to the meeting for more information.

There is a nominal student registration fee of $5, and for those students who preregister, a complimentary lunch is included. Students who make presentations are entitled to a free year of membership in the MAA, or if already members, a free journal subscription for a year. Just about all of the contributed papers will be accessible to students, and the invited speakers are expected to make very interesting and lively presentations. So if you are a student, be sure to come to the meeting. And if you are a faculty member, encourage your students to attend.

 

 

Program Highlights

Program Details

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Registration

Participants are encouraged to preregister for the meeting. You MUST preregister if you wish to attend either the dinner on Friday evening or the lunch on Saturday. While on-site registration is available, preregistration simplifies the process. Your namebadge, receipt, and any meal or workshop tickets will be waiting for you at the registration desk when you arrive.

DEADLINE. Preregistration forms must be received by April 1, 2002. Unfortunately, we will not be able to receive preregistration forms by email or fax, so please mail your form early. Click here for a printable version of the form and a mailing label.

Registrants for the meeting sometimes bring along a GUEST (typically a spouse, parent, son or daughter, etc.) who attends the meeting STRICTLY FOR SOCIAL REASONS, and not out of an interest in the program. For a guest to attend a meal event, a preregistration form must be submitted. Guests are not charged a registration fee for the meeting, only the cost of the meal(s) attended. Note that there is a place on the preregistration form to designate that the attendee is a guest.
 

Program Highlights

Program Details

Call for papers 

Student Information

Site Info

Registration