Professor Jerrold W. Grossman
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Oakland University
Rochester, MI 48309-4485 [thats Michigan]
PHONE: (248) 370-3443
FAX: (248) 370-4184
OFFICE: Room 346 SEB
E-MAIL: grossman@oakland.edu
(click on picture for bigger image;
photo by Jack Nachman)
Here are some useful or interesting WWW pages
- AMS directory, AMS, MSC, MAA,OU
MSN, MSN, authors, ZBL, Jahrbuch, Euler
- answers, msnsearch, ZIP2, google, webmail, Voyager,
library, quotes, Erdös (Erdős)
Numbers
- BW:MSC,
Det. News, Det. FP, Oak. Press, WWJ, NYT, Wash. Post, CNN, WUOM
- Undergrad,
equivs,
MacTutor, bio
index, math depts,
catalogs,
MathDL,
epinions,
nerd-in
- math
topics, Borwein, Chaitin, backgammon, ACBL, ACBLd12, MiBC,
units-calc
- ZIP
codes, postal rates, whitepages,
anywho, phone book, MapQuest, math1, E*Trade
- math
links, comp.
scientists, DBLP, e-cards,
MITcards,
Banner, real
Banner, netflix
- dict1, dict2,
colleges, earth coords, html
guide, advanced html, ascii codes,
time,
age
- IRS,
TIAA, CPI, national debt,
MIGHTY, MathOnWeb,
AAA, cartalk,
shortz,
dictionary
- lowest,
compare,
orbitz,
Delta, NW, SW, Chinesename,
calendar
- mathworld, offbeat math, DART Chance, anagrams,
sudoku, cheapbooks
(1)
(2),
sequences
-
MI colleges, Yahoo, infoseek,
metacrawler, ask, OU-AAUP, OU fix, OU phone,
reals
- accuweather,
cnn weather,
windchill,
Consumer World, pop clock, Michigan MAA, JSTOR
-
translate1,
Traveler, mathnerds, NP-completeness, math forum,
Friedmans
math,
eBay
- NickMath,
Prob.of.week, google math,
DOAJ,
Barnes&Noble, amazon, grammar
- math articles, google usenet, sci.math,
turtlestuff,
congressperson,
OED,
OUFac
- Math-Net,
common
names, grief, Comp. Friends,
Chicago manual,
usage,
wolfram
- picturefile,
ACM portal,
Combinatorialists,
chaos,
scirus,
grapher,
MathPro,
Wikipedia
Office hours and web pages for my courses
I do not have formal posted office hours. Rather, I am in my office
during almost all working hours (except for when I am teaching class or
attending a meeting), and students get top priority. Feel free to drop
by, or phone or e-mail to set up an appointment at any time.
However, I am currently on sabbatical leave (until August 15,
2008), and therefore will be in my office on a less regular basis. If
you have advising questions, please contact Professor Darrell
Schmidt; his e-mail is schmidt@oakland.edu. If you have other
questions not for me personally, please contact the Department of
Mathematics and Statistics office (248-370-3430).
Here are the home
pages for my Oakland University courses. Students in these courses should
consult them regularly for information, homework solutions (where
appropriate), test results, etc.
- HC 207, Winter 2007
- MTE 211, Winter 2007
- MTE 210, Fall 2006
- MTE 211, Fall 2006 (This is actually a link
to the Winter 2007 page.)
- MTE 405, Fall 2006
- MTE 210,
Winter 2006 (This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTE 211, Winter 2006
(This is actually a link
to the Winter 2007 page.)
- MTE 210,
Fall 2005 (This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTE 405, Fall 2005 (This is actually a link
to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTE 210, Fall 2005 (This is actually a link to the Fall
2006 page.)
- APM 569, Winter 2005
- MTH 155,
Fall 2004
- MTE 210,
Fall 2004 (This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTH 475,
Winter 2004
- MTE 211,
Winter 2004 (This is actually a link
to the Winter 2007 page.)
- MTE 210,
Fall 2003 (This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTE 210,
Winter 2003
(This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- APM 569, Winter 2003
(This is actually a link to the Winter 2005 page.)
- MTE 210, Fall
2002
(This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTE 405, Fall 2002
- APM 263, Fall
2002
- MTE 210, Fall
2001
(This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTE 405, Fall 2001
(This is actually a link to the Fall 2002 page.)
- APM 263, Fall
2001 (This is actually the link to the Fall 2002 page.)
- MTE 210, Winter
2001
(This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- STA 225, Winter 2001
- MTE 210, Fall
2000
(This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTE 405, Fall
2000 (This is actually the link to the Fall 2002 page.)
- APM 263, Winter
2000 (This is actually the link to the Fall 2002 page.)
- MTE 210, Winter
2000
(This is actually a link to the Fall 2006 page.)
- MTH 154, Fall
1999
- CSE 511 & APM 567, Winter
1999
More general information about programs in the Department of Mathematics
and Statistics can be found on the undergraduate and graduate program pages
maintained by the department. Mathematics and statistics majors should
definitely have a look at the advising
newsletters.
Erdös Number Project
A pet project of mine is to keep
track of the extent of collaboration in the mathematical sciences. This
project includes keeping up-to-date lists showing all people with
Erdös number less than or equal to 2. (The late Paul Erdös has
Erdös number 0, his co-authors have Erdös number 1, the other
co-authors of his co-authors have Erdös number 2, and so on.) Browse
our lists and information on the Erdös Number
Project
home page, and send any additions or corrections to me.
Research
My research is mainly in discrete mathematics and
theoretical computer science. In discrete
mathematics I concentrate on graph theory
(click here for
lots of resources in the subject) and other aspects of combinatorics.
Currently its focusing on weakly connected dominating
sets and influence digraphs induced by time-stamped graphs. In
theoretical computer science, Im mainly interested in
foundations and algorithms.
However, I have also worked in elementary number theory,
algebraic topology, probability
and statistics, and
other areas. Actually, I am interested in quite a few areas of mathematics.
Click here
for an interesting site that talks about all the branches of math. One of
my favorite papers is A mod-n Ackermann
function, or whats so special about 1969? (American
Mathematical
Monthly, 1993), which concerns a conjecture about the behavior of an
iteration process that is true for every value of n less than 4,000,000
except for n = 1969. This provides a great lesson in not jumping to
conclusions on the basis of numerical evidence. (See my curriculum vitae (also
available in TeX and postscript) for a
complete list of publications and other information. Also, if you have
access to MathSciNet,
then click here
for the Math Reviews list of my papers and their reviews; and click here
for the Math Reviews list of my reviews of papers by others.)
In addition, I am fond of mathematical puzzles and
games, and I like to propose and solve mathematical problems, such
as appear in the American
Mathematical Monthly and Mathematics Magazine, or occur
on the Putnam competition.
Im particularly proud of a problem in The Mathematical
Intelligencer, about a new
fundamental constant of mathematics.
Other professional activities
My teaching
interests are also fairly broad, including computer
science, statistics, and
mathematics
courses for elementary education majors, as well as the usual
mathematics major and service courses at both the graduate and the
undergraduate level. I must be doing a few things right, since I received
Oakland Universitys Teaching Excellence Award in 1992 and the 1994
Award for Distinguished
College or University Teaching of Mathematics in Michigan.
My textbook,
Discrete
Mathematics: An
Introduction to Concepts, Methods, and Applications
(Macmillan/Prentice-Hall,
1990), is suitable for a sophomore level course covering logic, set
theory, graph theory, combinatorics, and algorithms for mathematics and
computer science majors. Here is the errata list for the
book.
The third part of a faculty members job is
service on committees and similar duties.
On this front I have served as an academic adviser, associate chair of
the department, adviser for the student math club (S.A.M.), member of the University Senate and the College of Arts and Sciences Assembly
(and their Steering Committees), bargainer for our AAUP chapter, director of the state High School Visiting
Lecture Program, editor of the state MAA Newsletter,
member of the state high school mathematics
prize competition examination committee, Governor of the Michigan Section of the MAA, member of the
committee overseeing MAAs high
school competitions, member of the Educational
Materials Committee of the National
Council of Teachers of Mathematics and recorder of mathematical
materials for the blind and dyslexic (through RFB&D), to name a few highlights. I also
review research articles for Mathematical
Reviews, and have consulted for Ford Motor Company and numerous textbook
publishers. Recently I've been getting involved in some mathematics
education projects, such as this one (look at the videos).
Recognition has included the Michigan Section MAA Distinguished Service Award in
2005
and the national MAA Certificate for Meritorious
Service in 2007.
Memberships
I belong to the American Mathematical Society (AMS), the Mathematical Association of
America (MAA and its Michigan section), and the National Council
of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM)
and its Detroit area affiliate DACTM, and am a fellow (but not an active
member) of the Institute of Combinatorics and Its Applications (ICA),
but no longer the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM and its Activity Group on Discrete
Mathematics).
Brief biography
I was born in St. Louis, Missouri on April 25, 1948,
grew up (in the picture linked here, my brother is
on your left) in Arlington (see also here),
Virginia (suburban Washington, DC),
attended Glencarlyn
(rebuilt as Carlin Springs) and Claremont
Elementary Schools and Gunston
Junior High School (see also this
page), and
graduated from Wakefield High
School in 1966 (see also this
page and this one),
where perhaps the highlight was being named one of the
Westinghouse (now Intel) Science
Talent Search Top 40 national finalists; attended Stanford University, earning a BS and MS in
mathematics in 1970; and received a PhD in mathematics (in algebraic
topology under Dan
Kan*) from M.I.T. in 1974.
Ive been at Oakland
University ever since. I also spent summers during college working as
a mathematician at the National Bureau of Standards (now the National Institute of Standards and
Technology).
*My academic genealogy proceeds backwards from Kan through Samuel
Eilenberg, Karol
Borsuk, and Stefan
Mazurkiewicz to Waclaw
Sierpinski. Sierpinski seems to have had two academic advisors: Georgy
Voronoy in fact, and Stanislaw
Zaremba officially. From Voronoy the chain goes through several
Russians: Andrei
Markov, Pafnuty
Chebyshev, and Nikolai
Brashman, before ending, I am told, at the Viennese astronomer and
mathematician Joseph Johann von
Littrow (1781-1840). From Zaremba the chain goes through lots of
other famous names, including Simeon
Denis Poisson, Joseph
Lagrange,
Leonhard Euler, Johann
Bernoulli, Jacob
Bernoulli, and Gottfried
Leibniz. Two web sites track such genealogy, one in theoretical computer science (not
updated or maintained) and one in mathematics.
My curriculum vitae (also available
in TeX and postscript) contains a complete list of publications
and more details on all of the above topics if youre really
interested. Click here for a summary in
narrative form prepared recently in connection with being honored by the
OU Board of
Trustees. And if youre hell-bent on personal stuff, here are
some pictures of me at six months being held by
my godfather, Phil, my family (1984: me, my
wife Suzanne, my sister-in-law Kathy, my brother Richard, my mother
Florence holding my daughter Pamela, and my father Isadore holding my
nephew Conrad), my maternal grandparents,
Julius and Rebecca, taken around their wedding date (August 26, 1900),
and my paternal grandparents, Samuel and
Tillie (Lichtigman) Grossman, taken when they were about 23 and 20 years
old, respectively (circa 1907).
Personal information
I live in Rochester Hills, Oakland County, Michigan,
(about 30 miles north of Detroit)
within bicycling distance of the university,
with my wife, Suzanne Zeitman,
but no longer our cat, Carrie, who died
on 1/3/00 two months shy of her 21st birthday.
Sadly, Suzannes horse, Smarty, died on 6/10/00.
She now has Abby. Im allergic to horses.
The University of Michigan
is not far from here, and it has lots of resources.
In my spare time I like to travel, visit zoos,
shoot photographs,
play tournament bridge (3200 master points),
try to get better at backgammon,
sail Siegfried (my Laser), cross-country ski,
collect turtle art, attend conferences,
eat, cook, drink wine, eat in nice restaurants,
and go to good movies.
Also, I am trying to learn to play the piano.
Here are some more pictures of me, Suzanne, and us on a cruise.
This is our daughter, Pamela Jane Grossman (19841990).
There is a sculpture of a Galapagos tortoise
by William (Bill) Allen (other Allen works)
at the Detroit Zoo (newsletter)
in her memory.
(There is also a fund in her memory at Oakland University.)
Maybe its turtles all the way down.
Heres more about turtles.
URL = http://personalwebs.oakland.edu/~grossman/index.html
Last updated January 29, 2008.