November 04, 2004

East Asia Summer School

The NSF has an annual program entitled East Asia and Pacific Summer Institutes for U.S. Graduate Students .

The Program, aimed at US citizens, gives students the opportunity to
work with researchers in countries ranging from Japan and Korea to Australia.

You would need to make some arrangements with researchers there to
have a successful application. Deadline is in early December of each year.

Posted by lacey at 09:45 AM

AMS Meeting in Atlanta

The big AMS Meeting is in Atlanta this coming January.

Mason Porter is encouraging undergrads to participate in the undergrad poster session.

He writes: To participate in the poster session, you need to submit material ASAP
because space is limited. (It's really important for Georgia Tech to have a good showing here.) All material should be submitted by e-mail to Mario
Martelli (mmartelli@claremontmckenna.edu). Acceptable formats are tex, pdf and word. You need to submit the following:
1. project title
2. abstract (<= 1/2 page) 3. names and affiliations of all authors
4. name, email, and telephone # for student who will be the contact person for the logistics of the presentation
5. name(s) and affiliation(s) of advisors 6. sources of finanial support [much less relevant for you than
for undergrads traveling from elsewhere; I think this is an issue of preventing no-shows]

The best posters get prizes! I was a judge last year and the work you guys have done kicks the crap out of most of the stuff that was there (not that I'm biased or anything), so if you design a good poster, your chances are very good! Plus, you'll make some nice connections with people, so this really can be _substantially_ helpful for graduate school.

Posted by lacey at 09:38 AM

Math in the Media

A new web site by the American Mathematical Society collects recent article in the Media with a mathematical flavor.

A current article at the web site concerns a mysterious ad campaign by Google. It asks what is the
first 10 digit prime number in the decimal expansion of e.

Posted by lacey at 09:35 AM