Paul Erdős Award
The Paul Erdős Award, named after Paul Erdős, is given by the World Federation of National Mathematics Competitions for those who "have played a significant role in the development of mathematical challenges at the national or international level and which have been a stimulus for the enrichment of mathematics learning". The awards have been given in two-year periods since 1996.
Awardees
- 1992:
- Luis Davidson, Cuba
- Nikolay Konstantinov, Russia
- John Webb, South Africa
- 1994:
- Ronald Dunkley, Canada
- Walter Mientka, USA
- Urgengtserengiin Sanjmyatav, Mongolia
- Jordan Tabov, Bulgaria
- Peter Taylor, Australia
- Qiu Zonghu, Peoples Republic of China
- 1996:
- George Berzsenyi, USA
- Tony Gardiner, United Kingdom
- Derek Holton, New Zealand
- 1998:
- Agnis Andzans, Latvia
- Wolfgang Engel, Germany
- Mark Saul, USA
- 2000:
- Francisco Bellot Rosado, Spain
- István Reiman, Hungary
- János Surányi, Hungary
- 2002:
- Bogoljub Marinkovic, Yugoslavia
- Harold Braun Reiter, United States of America
- Wen-Hsien Sun, Taiwan
- 2004:
- Warren Atkins, Australia
- André Deledicq, France
- Patricia Fauring, Argentina
- 2006:
- Simon Chua, Philippines
- Ali Rejali, Iran
- Alexander Soifer, USA
- 2008:
- Hans-Dietrich (Dieter) Gronau, Germany
- Bruce Henry, Australia
- Leou Shian, Taiwan
- 2010:
- Rafael Sanchez-Lamoneda, Venezuela
- Yahya Tabesh, Iran
- 2012:
- Cecil C. Rousseau, USA
- Paul Vaderlind, Sweden
- 2014:
- Petar Kenderov, Bulgaria
- Jozsef Pelikan, Hungary
- Richard Rusczyk, USA
Sources
- Homepage of the award.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.