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         Uhlenbeck Karen:     more detail
  1. Instantons and Four-Manifolds (Mathematical Sciences Research Institute Publications) by Daniel S. Freed, Karen K. Uhlenbeck, 1990-12-03
  2. Biography - Uhlenbeck, Karen (Keskulla) (1942-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2002-01-01
  3. Surveys in Differential Geometry, Vol. 4: Integrable Systems by Karen Uhlenbeck, 1998-04-01
  4. Geometry and Quantum Field Theory: June 22-July 20, 1991, Park City, Utah (Ias/Park City Mathematics, Vol 1) by Daniel S. Freed, 1995-03-24
  5. Regularity of Minimizing Harmonic Maps Into the Sphere: MSRI 039-83 by Richard; Karen Uhlenbeck Schoen, 1983

1. Karen Uhlenbeck
Karen Uhlenbeck. August 24, 1942 Read Karen Uhlenbeck's Personal Profileat http//rene.ma.utexas.edu/users/uhlen/pers.html. References.
http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/uhlenbk.htm
Karen Uhlenbeck
August 24, 1942 - Graduated from University of Michigan in 1964. Received her Ph.D. from Brandeis University in 1968. Uhlenbeck has made "pioneering contributions to global analysis and gauge theory that resulted in advances in mathematical physics and the theory of partial differential equations." [MAA Focus] She has taught at many universities and since 1987 has held the Third Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents' Chair in Mathematics at the University of Texas. Was a MacArthur Fellow in 1983. Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1985) and the National Academy of Sciences (1986). On December 1, 2000, she received a National Medal of Science for "special recognition by reason of [her] outstanding contributions to knowledge" in the area of mathematics. She has also served as Vice-President of the American Mathematical Society. In 1990 she became only the second woman (after Emmy Noether in 1932) to give a Plenary Lecture at an International Congress of Mathematics. Read Karen Uhlenbeck's Personal Profile at http://rene.ma.utexas.edu/users/uhlen/pers.html.

2. Profiles Of Women In Mathematics: Karen K. Uhlenbeck
Karen Uhlenbeck. Moment Maps in Stable Bundles Where AnalysisAlgebra and Topology Meet. Atlanta, Georgia 1988.
http://www.awm-math.org/noetherbrochure/Uhlenbeck88.html
Karen Uhlenbeck Moment Maps in Stable
Bundles: Where Analysis
Algebra and Topology Meet Atlanta, Georgia 1988 Previous Index Next KAREN KESKULLA UHLENBECK, born on August 24, 1942 in Cleveland, Ohio, graduated from the University of Michigan in 1964 and received her PhD from Brandeis University in 1968, under the direction of Richard Palais. She has taught at many universities and has held the Third Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents' Chair in Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin since 1987. Her numerous honors include a MacArthur Fellowship (1983) and election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1985) and to the National Academy of Sciences (1986). She served as Vice-President of the American Mathematical Society, has sat on the editorial boards of ten research journals, and regularly serves as consultant to mathematics departments and foundations. In 1988, she received an honorary DSc degree from Knox College. In addition to her Noether Lecture, Uhlenbeck has delivered numerous invited lectures at major research centers, She presented the Colloquium Lectures of the American Mathematical Society at the Joint Summer Meetings in 1985. In Kyoto, Japan in 1990, she became the second woman to give a Plenary Lecture at an International Congress of Mathematics. The first woman to have this honor was Emmy Noether, who gave a lecture on algebra in the 1932 Congress. Uhlenbeck's mathematical interests include the calculus of variations, nonlinear partial differential equations, differential geometry, gauge theory, topological quantum field theory, and integrable systems. "This is a time of finding interrelationships within mathematics," she said in an article on her Noether Lecture in the May-June 1988 issue of the AWM

3. Karen K. Uhlenbeck
Karen Uhlenbeck. Moment Maps in Stable Bundles Where Analysis Algebraand Topology Meet. Atlanta, Georgia 1988. KAREN KESKULLA UHLENBECK
http://www.math.unl.edu/~awm/awm_folder/NoetherBrochure/Uhlenbeck88.html
Karen Uhlenbeck Moment Maps in Stable
Bundles: Where Analysis
Algebra and Topology Meet Atlanta, Georgia 1988 KAREN KESKULLA UHLENBECK, horn on August 24, 1942 in Cleveland, Ohio, graduated from the University of Michigan in 1964 and received her PhD from Brandeis University in 1968, under the direction of Richard Palais. She has taught at many universities and has held the Third Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents' Chair in Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin since 1987. Her numerous honors include a MacArthur Fellowship (1983) and election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1985) and to the National Academy of Sciences (1986). She served as Vice-President of the American Mathematical Society, has sat on the editorial boards of ten research journals, and regularly serves as consultant to mathematics departments and foundations. In 1988, she received an honorary DSc degree from Knox College. In addition to her Noether Lecture, Uhlenbeck has delivered numerous invited lectures at major research centers, She presented the Colloquium Lectures of the American Mathematical Society at the Joint Summer Meetings in 1985. In Kyoto, Japan in 1990, she became the second woman to give a Plenary Lecture at an International Congress of Mathematics. The first woman to have this honor was Emmy Noether, who gave a lecture on algebra in the 1932 Congress. "The list of possible applications is formidable," she says. Donaldson's invariants for four-manifolds are probably the best known, but nearly as important are the calculations of Atiyah-Bott on the topology of the space of stable bundles over curves. This machinery has also been used to classify flat bundles, to study Hodge structures, and to investigate the interaction of magnetic monopoles. "One can always guess this might be of use in string theory, which seems able to absorb every kind of mathematics."

4. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Karen Uhlenbeck
Programs » Prizes Awards » Common Wealth » uhlenbeck karen Uhlenbeck1995 Common Wealth Award for Science and Invention. A professor
http://www.sigmaxi.org/programs/prizes/common.uhlenbeck.shtml
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  • 5. Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck
    Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck August 24, 1942 Present Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck, avery famous mathematician, was born in Cleveland, Ohio on August 24, 1942.
    http://www.geocities.com/type3kids/rahuluhlenbeck.html
    Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck
    August 24, 1942 - Present
    Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck, a very famous mathematician, was born in Cleveland, Ohio on August 24, 1942. She has not died yet. Karen's mother was an artist and her father was an engineer. She has 4 siblings.
    When it was her time to start going to college, she went to the University of Michigan and recieved her Ph.D. from Brandeis University. After she finished college, Karen decided to work with the Texas Institute of Mathematics. Karen was also a college professor.
    Karen works in the mathematics field of partial differential equations.
    Resources used for this webpage include:
    Famous Mathematicians

    Return to the
    Meet the Mathematicians Homepage

    6. Karen Keskula Uhlenbeck
    Karen Keskula Uhlenbeck. Interesting Facts. She was born on August 24,1942, Herresearch area is Partial Differential Equations, She was born in Cleveland, OH.
    http://cory-rawson.k12.oh.us/msgifted/karen_keskula_uhlenbeck.htm
    Karen Keskula Uhlenbeck
    Interesting Facts She was born on August 24,1942 Her research area is Partial Differential Equations She was born in Cleveland, OH Her mother was an artist. She served as Vice President of the American Math. Her father was an engineer. Links Facts about Karen My Report Karen

    7. Mathematiker Mit Uu
    Translate this page Uhlenbeck Georg (1900 - 1988, Batavia). uhlenbeck karen (1942 - , Cleveland). UlamStanislav Marcin (1909 - 1984, Lemberg). Ulugh Beg (1393 - 1449, Soltaniyeh).
    http://homepages.compuserve.de/thweidenfeller/mathematiker/u.html
    U
    Uhlenbeck Georg (1900 - 1988, Batavia)
    Uhlenbeck Karen (1942 - , Cleveland) Ulam Stanislav Marcin (1909 - 1984, Lemberg) Ulugh Beg (1393 - 1449, Soltaniyeh) ... zurück

    8. RatingsOnline
    K. Carter Wheelock K. Suzanne Barber Kamala Visweswaran Kamy Sepehrnoori Karen ArtztKaren Browning Karen K. uhlenbeck karen L. Ostlund Karen L. Rascati Karin
    http://www.ratingsonline.com/pickprof.phtml?CID=1561&Alpha=K

    9. Untitled
    Benjamin, Inc. Inv. n. 6550 69) Freed Daniel S., uhlenbeck karenK. INSTANTOS AND FOURMANIFOLDS Springer-Verlag Inv. n. 1410 70
    http://www-th.bo.infn.it/eprint/biblio/catalogo.html

    10. Www.hoozajew.org/listsusedonwebsite/NAS%20mathematics
    Translate this page Robert Sternberg Shlomo Stroock Daniel Sullivan Dennis Swan Richard Tate John TaubesClifford Thurston William Tits Jacques uhlenbeck karen Varadhan Srinivasa R
    http://www.hoozajew.org/listsusedonwebsite/NAS mathematics
    Arnold Vladimir Artin Michael Aschbacher Michael Askey Richard Atiyah Michael Bass Hyman Bloch Spencer Bombieri Enrico Borel Armand Bott Raoul Browder William Browder Felix Burkholder Donald Caffarelli Luis Calabi Eugenio Cartan Henri Cheeger Jeff Chern Shiing-shen Cohen Paul Connes Alain Cox David Daubechies Ingrid Diaconis Persi Donaldson Simon Dynkin Eugene Federer Herbert Fefferman Charles Feit Walter Freedman Michael Friedman Avner Fulton William Furstenberg Hillel Gale David Gleason Andrew Glimm James Graham Ronald Grenander Ulf Griffiths Phillip Guillemin Victor Hamilton Richard Hochschild Gerhard Hochster Melvin Hormander Lars Howe Roger Ito Kiyosi Jaffe Arthur Jones Vaughan Kadison Richard Kalman Rudolf Kaplansky Irving Kazhdan David Kirby Robion Kohn Joseph Kostant Bertram Kruskal Martin Lang Serge Langlands Robert Lawson Blaine Lax Peter Lieb Elliott Lusztig George Mac Lane Mackey George MacPherson Robert Margulis Gregory Mather John Mazur Barry McDuff Dusa McKean Henry McLaughlin David Milnor John Nash John Jr. Nelson Edward Nirenberg Louis Novikov Sergei Ornstein Donald Palis Jacob Quillen Daniel Rabinowitz Paul Ratner Marina Ribet Kenneth Ruelle David Sato Mikio Schoen Richard Serre Jean-Pierre Serrin James Shafarevich Igor Sinai Iakov Smale Stephen Solovay Robert Stanley Richard Stein Elias Stein Charles Steinberg Robert Sternberg Shlomo Stroock Daniel Sullivan Dennis Swan Richard Tate John Taubes Clifford Thurston William Tits Jacques Uhlenbeck Karen Varadhan Srinivasa R. Whitehead George Wiles Andrew Zelmanov Efim

    11. Karen K. Uhlenbeck's Home Page
    karen K. uhlenbeck Welcome to my Home Page! Professor, and Sid W. Richardson Regents Chairholder, Department of Mathematics, University of Texas, Austin. Long Term Research Interests Geometric Partial Differential Equations
    http://www.ma.utexas.edu/users/uhlen
    Karen K. Uhlenbeck
    Welcome to my Home Page! Personal Information:
    Professor, and Sid W. Richardson Regents Chairholder, Department of Mathematics , University of Texas, Austin. Long Term Research Interests:
    • Geometric Partial Differential Equations The Calculus of Variations, especially scale invariant problems (past interest) Gauge Theory (now mostly for wave and non-linear Schoedinger systems) Integrable Systems Virasoro actions Non-linear waves and non-linear Schroedinger Equations, especially scale invariant problems
    Research Group: I am a member of the geomtry group in the mathematics department. We have three weekly seminars. Gadget is an informal seminar which meets for lunch Tuesday from 12:30 to 2:00. Students are particularly urges to attend this seminar. There is also a joint seminar with the high energy physics group Wednesday at 12:00, and a formal seminar on Thursdays from 3:30-5:00. Students are particularly urged to attend both the Gadget seminar and the first hour of the formal seminar. The formal seminar is split into two parts, and speakers are really expected to give an expository talk during the first hour. Only specialists usually stay for the second half. Here is some up-to-date information about the 2003 IAS/Princeton Women's Program The topic for 2003 is mathematical biology.

    12. Michigan Greats - Karen K. Uhlenbeck
    karen K. uhlenbeck studied mathematics for many years, well into graduate school, before she finally acknowledged that a
    http://www.research.umich.edu/news/michigangreats/uhlenbeck.html
    Home Site Map Queries: UMresearch@umich.edu
    MICHIGAN GREATS
    Karen K. Uhlenbeck A Pioneer in Mathematical Analysis and for Women Mathematicians by Lee Katterman
    Office of the Vice President for Research Karen K. Uhlenbeck studied mathematics for many years, well into graduate school, before she finally acknowledged that a career in this field was right for her. "Even when I had had my Ph.D. for five years," she said, "I was still struggling with whether I should become a mathematicians. I never saw myself very clearly." Today Uhlenbeck , occupant of the Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents Chair in Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin, is widely acclaimed as a talented and creative mathematician as well as someone who takes very seriously her obligation to mentor young women mathematicians. Through her research, Uhlenbeck has made very significant contributions to our understanding of the fundamental properties of matter. In her professional life, she has demonstrated a perseverance that enabled her to succeed in science in spite of the discouraging roadblocks she encountered. Karen Uhlenbeck was born in 1942 in Cleveland, Ohio. As a teenaged girl living in rural New Jersey in the 1950s, she exhibited unconventional ways through her active participation in sports and physical activity this during an era when girls were expected to be interested in dating, marriage, and having and raising children.

    13. Michigan Great Karen K. Uhlenbeck: Pioneer In Mathematical Analysis—and For Wom
    The University Record, December 6, 1999 Michigan Great karen K. uhlenbeck Pioneer in mathematical analysisand for women mathematicians
    http://www.umich.edu/~urecord/9900/Dec06_99/12.htm
    The University Record, December 6, 1999
    www.research.umich.edu/research/news/michigangreats.html
    By Lee Katterman
    Office of the Vice President for Research Uhlenbeck Today, Uhlenbeck, holder of the Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents Chair in Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin, is widely acclaimed as a talented and creative mathematician as well as someone who takes very seriously her obligation to mentor young women mathematicians. Through her research, Uhlenbeck has made significant contributions to our understanding of the fundamental properties of matter. In her professional life, she has demonstrated a perseverance that enabled her to succeed in science in spite of the discouraging roadblocks she encountered. After receiving her Ph.D. in 1968, she followed her bio-physicist husband to Massachusetts Institute of Technology and then Berkeley, where she worked as a non-tenure track lecturer because the schools interested in her husband were not interested in her. In 1971, Uhlenbeck was offered an assistant professorship at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. This time her husband moved with her. However, the marriage ended a few years later, at which time Uhlenbeck joined the faculty at the University of Illinois-Chicago. In 1995, Uhlenbeck received the Common Wealth Award for Science and Technology from Sigma Xi, the national research honorary society, and, in 1984, was named Alumna of the Year by the U-M.

    14. Uhlenbeck_Karen
    Biography of karen uhlenbeck (19420BC) karen uhlenbeck's father was an engineer and her mother was an artist.
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Uhlenbeck_Karen.html
    Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck
    Born: 24 Aug 1942 in Cleveland, Ohio, USA
    Click the picture above
    to see four larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    Karen Uhlenbeck 's father was an engineer and her mother was an artist. She grew up in the country, the eldest of four children. Many mathematicians know from early age that mathematics will be their life but this was not so with Karen Uhlenbeck. As a child she was interested in books and this led her to an interest in science. She writes:- As a child I read a lot, and I read everything. I'd go to the library and then stay up all night reading. I used to read under the desk in school. ... we lived in the country so there wasn't a whole lot to do. I was particularly interested in reading about science. I was about twelve years old when my father began bringing home Fred Hoyle's books on astrophysics. I found them very interesting. I also remember a little paperback book called "One, Two, Three, and, in?

    15. Prizes, Awards, And Honors For Women Mathematicians
    1983 karen uhlenbeck; 1990 Nancy Kopell; 1992 Ingrid Daubechies. Alice T. SchaferPrize. 1985 karen uhlenbeck. Complete list of the AMS Colloquium Lecturers.
    http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/prizes.htm
    Biographies of Women Mathematicians , Agnes Scott College]
    Prizes, Awards, and Honors for Women Mathematicians
    Prizes and Awards
    Lecturers
    Offices
    Nobel Prize in Mathematics
    A trick question! There is no Nobel prize in mathematics. Why not? That question has created numerous stories, myths, and anecdotes. The most popular is that Nobel's wife had an affair with a mathematician, usually said to be Mittag-Leffler, and in revenge Nobel refused to endow one of his prizes in mathematics. Too bad for this story that Nobel was a life-long bachelor! The other common story is that Mittag-Leffler, the leading Swedish mathematician of Nobel's time, antagonized Nobel and so Nobel gave no prize in mathematics to prevent Mittag-Leffler from becoming a winner. This story is also suspect, however, because Nobel and Mittag-Leffler had almost no contact with each other. Most likely Nobel simply never gave any thought to including mathematics among his list of prize areas.

    16. Uhlenbeck_Karen
    karen Keskulla uhlenbeck. Born 24 Aug 1942 in Cleveland, Ohio, USA. karenuhlenbeck's father was an engineer and her mother was an artist.
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Uhlenbeck_Karen.html
    Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck
    Born: 24 Aug 1942 in Cleveland, Ohio, USA
    Click the picture above
    to see four larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    Karen Uhlenbeck 's father was an engineer and her mother was an artist. She grew up in the country, the eldest of four children. Many mathematicians know from early age that mathematics will be their life but this was not so with Karen Uhlenbeck. As a child she was interested in books and this led her to an interest in science. She writes:- As a child I read a lot, and I read everything. I'd go to the library and then stay up all night reading. I used to read under the desk in school. ... we lived in the country so there wasn't a whole lot to do. I was particularly interested in reading about science. I was about twelve years old when my father began bringing home Fred Hoyle's books on astrophysics. I found them very interesting. I also remember a little paperback book called "One, Two, Three, and, in?

    17. UV Index
    uhlenbeck, George (1800*) uhlenbeck, karen (1114*) Ulam, Stanislaw (1422*), UlughBeg (1219*) Umawi, Abu al (1014) Uqlidisi, Abu'l al(1028), Upton, Francis (359
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Indexes/UV.html
    Names beginning with U or V
    The number of words in the biography is given in brackets. A * indicates that there is a portrait. Uhlenbeck, George
    Uhlenbeck, Karen

    Ulam
    , Stanislaw (1422*)
    Ulugh Beg

    Umawi
    , Abu al (1014)
    Uqlidisi
    , Abu'l al(1028)
    Upton
    , Francis (359*)
    Urysohn
    , Pavel (1391*)
    Vacca
    , Giovanni (707*)
    Vailati
    , Giovanni (555*)
    Val
    , Patrick du (380*) Valerio , Luca (278) , C de la (1702*) van Amringe , Howard (354*) van Ceulen , Ludolph (223*) van Dantzig , David (518) van der Waerden , Bartel (552*) van Heuraet , Hendrik (170) van Lansberge , Philip (243*) van Roomen , Adriaan (419) van Schooten , Frans (259*) van Vleck , Edward (358*) Vandermonde , Alexandre (1379) Vandiver , Harry (215) Varahamihira , Varahamihira (744) Varignon , Pierre (199) Vashchenko-Z , Mikhail (241*) Veblen , Oswald (655*) Vega , Jurij von (295*) Velez-Rodriguez , Argelia (768*) Venant Venn , John (385*) Verhulst , Pierre (411) Vernier , Pierre (344) Veronese , Giuseppe (617*) Verrier , Urbain Le (450*) Vessiot , Ernest (229*) Vijayanandi Vincent , Gregorius Saint- (296*) Vinci , Leonardo da (704*) Vinogradov , Ivan (685*) Vitali , Giuseppe (269*) Viviani , Vincenzo (339*) Vlacq , Adriaan (199) Vleck , Edward van (344*) Volterra , Vito (436*) von Brill , Alexander (473*) von Dyck , Walther (737*) , Roland (159*) von Helmholtz , Hermann (2214*) , Theodore (202*) von Koch , Helge (736*) von Leibniz , Gottfried (3723*) von Lindemann , Carl (895*) von Mises , Hilda Geiringer (1469*) von Mises , Richard (2108*) von Neumann , John (2475*) von Segner , Johann (356*) von Seidel , Philipp (572) von Staudt , Karl (146*)

    18. Poster Of Uhlenbeck_Karen
    was born in 1942 karen uhlenbeck is a leading expert on partial differential equations. Find out more at
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Posters2/Uhlenbeck_Karen.html
    Karen Uhlenbeck was born in 1942 Karen Uhlenbeck is a leading expert on partial differential equations. Find out more at
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/
    Mathematicians/Uhlenbeck_Karen.html

    19. Schedule For Karen K. Uhlenbeck

    http://www.ma.utexas.edu/users/uhlen/schedule.html
    Schedule for Karen K. Uhlenbeck
    Exceptions to schedule: Math 375:(course) The Teaching assistant Heather Lehr will meet the class on the first day . Professor Uhlenbeck will not meet her regular office hours on the following dates: Sept 26,27.... OFFICE HOURS:
    M 1-2; Wed 3:30-5:00, Th 1-2 and by appointment
    Many days, Professor Uhlenbeck can be found in her office late in the afternoons.
    Appointments can be scheduled , preferably M,Tu 11, 12,W 12, 1 You may make an appointment with Professor Uhlenbeck by calling Vittoria Esile (471-6237)
    or e-mailing her. esile@math.utexas.edu
    LECTURE COURSES:
    Math 375, MW. 2-3:15, RLM 7.112
    READIN G AND SEMINAR COURSES:
    Math 375 (advanced section) TU TH 2-3:15 RLM 9.160
    REGULAR SCHEDULED APPOINTMENTS M 3:30A. Mandolesi
    Tu 3:30 A. Goncalves Th 11:00 M. Vajiac SEMINARS Math Colloquium M 4-5 Physics Colloquium W 4-5 GADGET Tu 12:30-2:00 Analysis W 1:00 Geometry Th 3:30-5:30 To send mail to Vittoria Esile: esile@math.utexas.edu To send mail to Karen Uhlenbeck: uhlen@math.utexas.edu Return To Karen K. Uhlenbeck's Home Page Return to Math
    375 (course) home page Updated: September 10 , 2001.

    20. TGT- Karenfest
    Celebrates the 60th Birthday of. karen K. uhlenbeck. The University of Texas at Austin
    http://www.ma.utexas.edu/karenfest
    The Texas Geometry and Topology Conference
    Celebrates the 60th Birthday of
    Karen K. Uhlenbeck
    The University of Texas at Austin
    October 11-13, 2002
    Speakers: Jean-Pierre Bourguignon
    Steven Bradlow
    Philip Candelas
    Antonella Grassi
    Takashi Kimura
    Richard Schoen
    Jalal Shatah
    Clifford Taubes Organizers: Dan Freed
    Lorenzo Sadun Vittoria Esile This conference is supported by the National Science Foundation and the University of Texas. All are welcome, and there are no registration fees. The Texas Geometry and Topology Conference is committed to the strengthening and enrichment of the mathematics personnel base. We will be able to offer some support for expenses. Graduate students, junior faculty, women, minorities, and persons with disabilities are especially encouraged to participate and to apply for support.
    About Karen Uhlenbeck
    Conference Schedule
    Registration
    Travel Information ...
    Lodging
    Contact us by email or telephone: 512-471-6237

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