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Christie Lectures

The Christie Lecture was introduced by the Northeastern Section in 1979 to honor Dan Christie (1915-1975) of Bowdoin College. He was one of the founding fathers of the Section, serving two terms as Chair and one as Governor. He was also quite involved in the MAA on the national level.

The following is taken from Spring 1979 Newsletter: "The Christie Lecture will be given by a distinguished member of the mathematical community and is part of the annual (Fall) meeting. The topic of the lecture will be an issue of current importance in mathematics. And, although the Section is rich in people who have made contributions to research and teaching, the choice of the Christie Lecturer is not restricted to a member of the Section."

Previous Christie Lectures

1979 John Milnor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Is the Universe Simply-Connected?
1980 Gian-Carlo Rota, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The Fall and Rise of Invarient Theory
1981 John T. Tate, Harvard University
Number Theory on Elliptic Curves – Old Theorems and Recent Conjectures 
1982 John Wermer, Brown University
The Maximum Principle and Analytic Functions
1983 Henry O. Pollak, Bell Laboratories
On the Addressing Problem in Loop Switching, or, How to Embed an Arbitrary Graph in a Squashed Cube
1984 Phillip J. Davis, Brown University
When Mathematics Says No; The Nature of Impossibilities in Mathematics
1985 Albert W. Tucker, Princeton University
The Cornerstone of Matrix Algebra
1986 Ernst Snapper, Dartmouth College
What Do We Do When We Do Mathematics?
1987 Reuben Hersch, University of New Mexico
The Social Responsibility of Mathematicians
1988 Ron Graham, AT&T Bell Laboratories
Universal Cycles for Combinatorial Structures
1989 Paul A. Schweitzer,, Boston College
Elementary Knot Theory and Computation
1990 John H. Conway, Princeton University
Mathematics and Games
1991 Rodica Simion, George Washington University
A Few gems, Old and New
1992 Peter Hilton, SUNY at Binghamton
A Further Look at Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers
1993 Jim Tattersall, Providence College
The Early History of the Lucasian Chair
1994 Robert Rosenbaum. Wesleyan University
A Balancing Act
1995 Doris Schattschneder, Moravian College
Ingenious Mathematical Amateurs – M.C. Escher (artist) and Marjorie Rice (homemaker)
1996 Roger Cooke, University of Vermont
N.N. Luzin’s Notebooks on the Mysteries of Set Theory
1997 Michael Starbird, University of Texas at Austin
Mathematics for Future Lawyers, Legislators, and Business Leaders
1998 Gilbert Strang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cosine Transforms and Wavelet Transforms and Applications
1999 Charles Hadlock, Bentley College
Looking at Classical Mathematics Through Smoke and Haze
2000 Edward B. Burger, Williams College
Personal Thoughts on How to Teach and What Not to Teach
2001 Richard K. Guy, University of Calgary
Math From Fun and Fun From Math
2002 Carl Pomerance, Bell Laboratories
Primal Screens
2003 Lisa Humphrys, Rhode Island College
Exploring Uncharted Territory in Forced ODE’s: Strange and Counterintuitive Periodic Solutions
2004 Ezra Brown, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Elliptic Curves: The Silver Bullets of Modern Mathematics
2005 Dusa McDuff, SUNY at Stony Brook
Symplectic Topology Today
2006 Jennifer Beineke, Western New England College
Great Moments of the Riemann Zeta Function
2007 Thomas Garrity, Williams College
Using Mathematical Maturity to Shape Our Courses, Our Curriculums and Our Careers
 

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