Biographies of Women Mathematical Scientists
and History of Women in Mathematical Sciences
Publications

[1] AMS Notices Special Issue on Women in Mathematics, Notices of the American Mathematical Society 38 no. 7 (1991), 701-754.
[2] Black pioneers in mathematics, Focus 1991 no. Jan-Feb .
[3] Grace Brewster Murray Hoopper, mathematician and computer softwared designer known as the mother of COBOL., in Particular Passiosn; Talks with Women Who Have Shaped Our Times, L. Gilbert and G. Moore, Eds., 1981), 58-63.
[4] Julia Robertson: Functional equations in arithmetic, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter (1988), 2-3.
[5] Math teacher Delores Wilkins dies at age 61, Washington Post, 1995, May 14, (1995) Sec B, p6 col4.
(abstract)
[6] Profiles of Women in Mathematics - The Emmy Noether Lectures, Assocation for Women in Mathematics (1995).
[7] Schools courting teen math whiz, Register Guard, 89/1/9 (1989).
(abstract)
[8] Special Issue on Women and Mathematics: A Critical Inquiry, Philosophia Mathematica 13/14 (1976/77).
[9] Women mathematicians before 1950, AWM Newsletter 9 no. 4 (1979), 9-11.
[10] Women of Computer History: Forgotten Pioneers, The Institute, Wilmington, DE (1989).
[11] P. G. Abir-Am, Synergy or clash: Disciplinary and marital strategies in the career of mathematical biologis Dorothey Wrinch, in Uneasy Careers and Intimate Lives: Women in Science, 1789-1979, P. G. Abir-Am and D. Outram, Eds. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick (1987), 239-280.
[12] M. G. Ainley,Despite the Odds: Essays on Canadian Women and Science, , University of Toronto Press, Montreal (1990).
[13] D. Albers, G. L. Alexanderson, and C. Reid,More Mathematical People: Contemporary Conversations, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Boston (1990).
[14] D. J. Albers and C. Reid, An interview with Mary Ellen Rudin, College Mathematics Journal 19 no. 2 (1988), 114-137.
(abstract)
[15] Ambrose,No Universal Constants: Journeys of Women in Science and Engineering, , Temple University Press,
[16] K. K. Anand, Cypra Cecilia Krieger and the human side of mathematics, in Despite the Odds-Essays on Canadian Women and Science, M. Ainley, Ed. Vehicule Press, 1990), 248-251.
[17] K. K. Anand, Hanna Neumann: A great woman mathematician from down under, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 18 no. 1 (1988), 10-13.
[18] M. Anderson, The history of women and the history of statistics, Journal of Women's History 4 no. 1 (1992), 14-36.
[19] R. L. Anderson, Gertrude M. Cox---A modern pioneer in statistics, Biometrics 35 (1979), 3-7.
[20] D. Angluin, Lady Lovelace and the analytical engine, AWM Newsletter 6 no. 1 (1976), 6-8.
[21] R. C. Archibald, Women as Mathematicains and Astronomers, American Mathematical Monthly 25 no. 3 (1918), 136-139.
(abstract)
[22] I. Asimov,Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, Doubleday (1982).
[23] C. Avelsgaard, Women in mathematics: the silent minority, The Mathematical Intelligencer 10 no. 4 (1988), 32-34.
[24] J. Baum,The Calculating Passion of Ada Byron, Archon Books, Hamden, CT (1986).
[25] J. S. Birman, D. Haimo, S. Landau, B. Srinivasan, V. Pless, and J. E. Taylor, In her own words: Six mathematicians reflect on their lives and careers, Notices of the American Mathematical Society 38 no. 7 (1991), 702-706.
[26] L. Blum, A brief history of the Association for Women in Mathematics: The Presidents' perspective, Notices of the American Mathematical Society 38 no. 7 (1991), 738-754.
[27] L. Blum, Women in mathematics: an international perspective, eight years later, The Mathematical Intelligencer 9 no. 2 (1987), 28-32.
[28] H. Bromberg, Grace Murray Hopper: A Remembrance, IEEE Software 9 no. 3 (1992), 103.
(abstract)
[29] L. L. Bucciarelli and N. Dworsky,Sophie Germain: An Essay in the History of the Theory of Elasticity, 9, Reidel, Dordrecht (1980).
[30] D. Buerk, Voices of Women Making Meaning in Mathematics, Journal of Education 167 no. 3 (1985).
[31] L. Burton,Gender and Mathematics: An International Perspective, , Cassell Educational Ltd., Strand (1990).
(abstract)
[32] N. Byers, The Life and Times of Emmy Noether; contributions of E. Noether to particle physics, presented at International Conference on The History of Original Ideas and Basic Discoveries in Particle Physics, Erice, Italy, (1994).
(abstract)
[33] A. Cameron, Isidor of Miletua and Hypatia: On the editing of mathematical texts, Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 31 (1990), 103-127.
[34] P. J. Campbell and L. S. Grinstein, Women and mathematics: a preliminary selected bibliography, Philosophia Mathematica 13/14 (1976-77), 171-203.
(abstract)
[35] P. J. Campbell and L. S. Grinstein,Women of Mathematics: A Bibliographic Sourcebook, , Greenwood Press, New York (1987).
(abstract)
[36] C. Cantwell, BU math professor's life filled with firsts, AWM Newsletter 16 no. 4 (1986), 8-9.
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[37] M. L. Cartwright, Grace Chisholm Young, Journal London Mathematical Society 19 (1944), 185-191.
[38] M. L. Cartwright, Sheila Scott Macintyre, Journal London Mathematical Society 36 (1961), 254-256.
[39] M. R. Chowdhury, Response to "Sofia Kovalevskaia and the mathematical community" by Ann Hibner Koblitz, The Mathematical Intelligencer 4 no. 8 (1986), 68-72.
[40] M. R. Chowdhury and A. H. Koblitz, Koblitz, Klein and Kovalevskaia, The Mathematical Intelligencer 8 no. 4 (1986), 68-72.
[41] W. G. Cochran, Gertrude Mary Cox 1900-1978, International Statistical Review 47 no. 1 (1979), 97-98.
[42] R. Cooke, Sonya Kovalevskaya's Place in Nineteenth Century Mathematics, in The Legacy of Sonya Kovalevskaya: Proceedings of a Symposium, L. Keen, Ed. American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI (1986), 17-51.
[43] J. L. Cooledge, Six female mathematicians, Scripta Mathematica 21 (1951), 20ff.
[44] J. L. Coolidge, Six Female Mathematicians, Scripta Mathematica 17 no. 1/2 (1951), 20-31.
(abstract)
[45] M. P. Cooney,Celebrating Women in Mathematics and Science, , National Counctil of Teachers of Mathematics,
(abstract)
[46] H. S. M. Coxeter,Regular Polytopes, Methuen & Co., London, England (1948).
(abstract)
[47] A. Dahan-Dalmedico, Sophie Germain, Scientific American 265 (1991), 116-120.
[48] A. D. Dalmedico, Sophie Germain, Scientific Amerian December (1991), 117-122.
[49] R. Dan and P. J. Hilton, Mina Rees, in Mathematical People, D. J. Albers and G. J. Alexanderson, Eds. Birkhauser, Boston (1985), 256-267.
(abstract)
[50] J. W. Dauben,The History of Mathematics From Antiquity to the Present: A Selected Bibliography, , Garland, New York (1985).
[51] C. de Pisan,The Book of the City of Ladies, Persea Books (1982).
[52] A. Dick,Emmy Noether, 1882-1935, Birkhauser, Boston (1981).
(abstract)
[53] M.-L. DuBreil-Jacotin, Women Mathematicians, in Great Currents in Mathematical Thought, F. LeLionnais, Ed. Dover, New York (1971), 168-180.
(abstract)
[54] M. Dzielska,Hypatia of Alexandria, 8, Harvard University Press (1995).
[55] W. C. Eells, American doctoral dissertations on mathematics and astronomy written by women in the nineteenth century, The Mathematics Teacher 50 no. 5 (1957), 374-376.
[56] H. G. Eggleston, Winifred L. C. Sargent, Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 2 (1981), 173-176.
[57] H. G. Eggleston, Winifred L. C. Sargent, AWM Newsletter 13 no. 1 (1983), 7-10.
(abstract)
[58] C. Eisele, Lao Genevra Simons, Scripta Mathematica 1950 no. 16 (1950), 22-30.
[59] E. Falconer and L. Lorch, Vivienne Malone-Mayes: in memoriam, AWM Newsletter 25 no. 6 (1995), 8.
[60] D. Farquhar and M.-R. Lynn,Women Sum It Up: Biographical Sketches of Women Mathematicians, Hazard Press, Christchurch (1989).
[61] D. D. Fenster and K. Parshall, Women in the American mathematical research community: 1891-1906, in The History of Modern Mathematics, Vol. 3: Images, Ideas, and Communities, 3, The History of Modern Mathematics, E. Knobloch and D. E. Rowe, Eds., 1982 ), 229-261.
[62] B. Friedman, Bringing knowledge of women mathematicians into the mathematics classroom, Mathematics and Computer Education 24 no. 3 (1990), 250-253.
[63] I. Grattan-Guinness, A Mathematical union: William Henry and Grace Chisolm Young, Annals of Science 29 no. 2 (1972), 105-186.
[64] M. Gray, Sophie Germain, a bicentennial appreciation, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 6 no. 6 (1976), 10-14.
[65] M. Gray, Women in mathematics, American Mathematical Monthly 79 (1972), 475-479.
[66] M. W. Gray, The Association for Women in Mathematics - a personal view, The Mathematical Intelligencer 13 no. 4 (1991), 6-11.
[67] J. Green and J. LaDuke, Contributors to American Mathematics: An Overview and Selection, in Women of Science-Righting the Record, G. Kass-Simon and P. Farnes, Eds. Indiana University Press, 1990).
(abstract)
[68] J. Green and J. LaDuke, Women in American Mathematics: A Century of Contributions, in A Century of Mathematics in America, Part II, P. Duren, Ed. American Mathematical Society, 1989).
[69] J. Green and J. LaDuke, Women in the American Mathematical Community: Pre-1940 Ph.D.'s, Mathematical Intelligencer 9 no. 1 (1987), 11-23.
[70] J. Green, J. LaDuke, and T. H. Perl, Women in mathematics, in The History of Mathematics From Antiquity to the Present: A Selected Bibliography, J. W. Dauben, Ed. Garland, New York (1985), 428-434.
[71] L. Grinstein and P. Campbell, Anna Johnson Pell Wheeler: Her life and work, Historia Mathematica 1982 no. 9 (1982), 37-53.
[72] L. S. Grinstein, Some 'forgotten' women of mathematics: A Who was who, Philosophia Mathematica 13/14 (1976/77), 73-78.
(abstract)
[73] D. W. Gurer, Pioneering women in computer science, Communications of the ACM 1 no. 38 (1995), 45-54.
[74] F. Hamel,An Eighteenth-Century Marquise: A Study of Emilie du Chatelet and Her Times, J. Pott, New York (1911).
[75] L. Hay, How I became a mathematician (or how it was in the bad old days), Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 19 no. 5 (1989), 8-10.
[76] H. Henderson,Modern Mathematicians, Facts on File, New York (1996).
(abstract)
[77] D. Hoffleit,The Education of American Women Astronomers Before 1960, The American Association of Variable Star Observers, Cambridge (1994).
[78] G. Hopper, The grand old lady of software, Newsweek 1983 May 9.
[79] G. Hopper, What lies ahead, Byte 1989 no. Jan (1989), 343-345.
[80] E. Hoyrup, Women and mathematics, science, and engineering: A partially annotated bibliography with emphasis on mathematics and with references on related topics, Skrifserie fra Roskilde Universitetsbiblioteck 4 (1978).
[81] D. J. Hurvich, Christine Ladd-Franklin, in Notable American Women 1607-1950, 2. Harvard University Press, 1971), 354-356.
[82] V. R. Huskey and H. D. Huskey, Lady Lovelace and Charles Babbage, Annals of the History of Computing 2 no. 4 (1980), 299-329.
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[83] R. F. Iacobacci, Women of Mathematics, Arithmetic Teacher 17 no. 4 (1970), 316-324.
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[84] R. F. Iacobacci, Women of Mathematics, Mathematics Teacher 63 no. 4 (1970), 329-337.
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[85] C. M. Iltis, Madame du Chatelet's metaphysics and mechanics, Stuides in History and Philosophy of Science 8 (1977), 29-48.
[86] B. W. Jones and R. A. Rosenbaum, Louise Johnson Rosenbaum, AWM Newsletter 12 no. 4 (1982), 16-19.
[87] P. S. Jones, Women in American mathematics-20th century, The Mathematics Teacher 50 no. 5 (1957), 376-378.
[88] A. Katok and S. Katok, Women in Soviet mathematics, Notices of the American Mathematical Society 40 no. 2 (1988), 108-116.
[89] L. Keen,The Legacy of Sonya Kovalevskaya: Proceedings of a Symposium Sponsored by the Association for Women in Mathematics and the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute, , American Mathematical Society, Providence (1986).
[90] E. F. Keller,A Feeling for th eOrganism: the Life and Work of Barbara McClintock, Freeman and Co. (1983).
[91] D. H. Kennedy,Little Sparrow: A Portrait of Sophia Kovalevsky, Ohio University Press, Athens, OH (1983).
[92] H. C. Kennedy, The witch of Agnesi exorcised, Mathematics Teacher 62 no. 6 (1969), 480-482.
[93] P. Kenschaft, Black Women in Mathematics in the United States, Journal of African Civilizations 1982 no. April (1982), 63-68.
[94] P. Kenschaft, An interview with Marguerite Lehr: in memoriam, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 18 no. 2 (1988), 9-11.
[95] P. Kenschaft, Marjorie Lee Browne: In memoriam, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 10 no. 5 (1980), 8-11.
[96] P. Kenschaft, Why did Charlotte Scott succeed?, AWM Newsletter no. March/April 1987 (1987), 4-9.
[97] P. C. Kenschaft, Black men and women in mathematical research, Journal of Black Studies 18 no. 2 (1987), 170-190.
(abstract)
[98] P. C. Kenschaft, Black women in mathematics in the United States, Journal of African Civilizations 4 no. 1 (1982), 63-83.
(abstract)
[99] P. C. Kenschaft, Black women in mathematics in the United States, American Mathematical Monthly 88 no. 8 (1981), 592-604.
(abstract)
[100] P. C. Kenschaft, Charlotte Angas Scott (1858-1931), in Women of Mathematics: A Biographic Sourcebook, L. S. Grinstein and P. Campbell, Eds. Greenwood Press, Westport, CT (1987).
[101] P. C. Kenschaft, Charlotte Angas Scott, 1858-1931, AWM Newsletter 8 no. 1 (1978), 11-12.
[102] P. C. Kenschaft, Charlotte Angas Scott, 1858-1931, The College Mathematics Journal 18 (1987), 98-110.
[103] P. C. Kenschaft, Charlotte Angas Scott, 1858-1931, AWM Newsletter 7 no. 6 (1977), 9-10.
[104] P. C. Kenschaft, Charlotte Angus Scott, 1858-1931, College Mathematics Journal 18 no. 2 (1987), 98-110.
[105] P. C. Kenschaft, Letter/Comments: Women in mathematics around 1900, Signs 7 no. 4 (1982), 906-909.
[106] P. C. Kenschaft, The students of Charlotte Angas Scott, Mathematics in College no. Fall 1982 (1982).
[107] P. C. Kenschaft, Women in Mathematics around 1900, Signs 7 no. 4 (1982), 906-909.
[108] O. Kenyon,800 Years of Women's Letters, , Penguin Books, (1982).
[109] C. Kimberling, Emmy Noether, Greatest Woman Mathematician, The Mathematics Teacher 75 no. 3 (1982).
[110] C. H. Kimberling, Emmy Noether, American Mathematical Monthly 79 no. 2 (1972), 136-149.
[111] C. Kingsley,Hypatia, E.P. Dutton & co., New York (1935).
[112] I. Kleiner, Emmy Noether: Highlights of her life and work, Enseignement Matematique 38 no. 1-2 (1992), 103-124.
[113] A. H. Koblitz, Careers and Home Life in the 1880s: The Choices of Mathematician Sofia Kovalevskaia, in Uneasy Careers and Intimate Lives: Women in Science, 1789-1979, P. G. Abir-Am and D. Outram, Eds. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick (1987), 172-190.
[114] A. H. Koblitz, Changing Views of Sofia Kovalevskaia, in The Legacy of Sonya Kovalevskaya: Proceedings of a Symposium Sponsored by the Association for Women in Mathematics and the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute, L. Keen, Ed. American Mathematical Soci ety, Providence (1986), 53-76.
[115] A. H. Koblitz,A Convergence of Lives: Sofia Kovalevskaia: Scientist, Writer, Revolutionary, American Mathematical Society, Providence (1993).
[116] A. H. Koblitz, Elizaveta Fedorovna Litvinova (1845-1919)--Russian mathematician and pedagogue, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 14 no. 1 (1984), 13-17.
[117] A. H. Koblitz, Sofia Kovalevskaia and the mathematical community, The Mathematical Intelligencer 6 no. 1 (1986), 20-29.
[118] A. H. Koblitz, Sofia Kovalevskaia--A Biographical Sketch, in The Legacy of Sonya Kovalevskaya: Proceedings of a Symposium Sponsored by the Association for Women in Mathematics and the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute, L. Keen, Ed. American Mathematical Society, Providence (1986), 3-16.
[119] P. I. Kochian, A. Y. Ishlinsky, and Z. K. Sokolovskaya,Love and Mathematics; Sofya Kovalevskaya, , Mir, Moscow (1985).
[120] G. B. Kolata, Cathleen Morawetz: The mathematics of waves, Science 206 no. Oct. 12 (1979).
[121] S. Kovalevskaya,A Russian Childhood, Springer, New York (1978).
(abstract)
[122] E. Kramer, Maria Gaetana Agnesi, in Dictionary of Scientific Biography, 1, C. C. Gillispie, Ed., , 75-77.
[123] E. E. Kramer, Six More Female Mathematicians, Scripta Mathematica 23 no. 1/4 (1957), 83-95.
[124] C. Ladd-Frankline, Sophie Germain: An unknown mathematician, Century 48 (1894), 946-949.
[125] C. Ladd-Frankline, Sophie Germain: An unknown mathematician, AWM Newsletter 11 no. 3 (1981), 7-11.
(abstract)
[126] J. LaDuke, M. S. Barnes, V. Malone-Mayes, O. Taussky-Todd, and N. Green, Centennial reflections on women in American mathematics, Assocation for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 18 no. 6 (1988), 4-12.
[127] L. Lafortune,Femmes et Mathematique, , Les Editions du remue-menage, Montreal (1986).
(abstract)
[128] R. Love, "Alice in eugenics-land': Feminism and eugenics in the scientific careers of Alice Lee and Ethel Elderton, Annals of Science 36 (1979), 145-158.
[129] E. H. Luchins and M. A. McLoughlin, In memoriam: Olga Taussky-Todd, Notices of the American Mathematical Society 43 no. 8 (1996), 837-847.
(abstract)
[130] F. S. Macaulay, Dr. Charlotte Angas Scott, Journal of the London Mathematical Society 7 (1932), 230-240.
[131] D. MacHale,George Boole: His Life and Work, Dublin (1983).
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[132] S. Mary Thomas a Kempis, The Walking Polyglot, Scripta Mathematica 6 no. 4 (1939), 211-217.
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[133] R. McCroskey and A. C. McCroskey, Woman Ph.D.'s in mathematics in USA and Canada: 1886-1973, Philosophia Mathematica 79 no. 13/14 (1976/77).
[134] D. E. Men'shov, S. B. Stechkin, and P. L. Ul'yanov, Nina Karlovna Bari, Russian Mathematical Surveys 17 no. 1 (1962), 119-127.
(abstract)
[135] J. Miller, Nadine Kowalsky: In Memoriam, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 26 no. 4 (1996).
[136] N. Mitford, Voltaire in Love, Hamish Hamilton, London (1957).< BR>(abstract)
[137] R. J. Monroe and F. E. McVay, Gertrude Mary Cox (1900-1978), American Statistician 34 no. 1 (1980), 48.
[138] E. Morris and L. Harkleroad, Rozsa Peter: Recursive Function Theory's Founding Mother, The Mathematical Intelligencer 12 (1990), 59.
[139] E. Morris and L. Harkleroad, Rozsa Peter: Recursive function theory's founding mother, The Mathematical Intelligencer 12 no. 1 (1990), 59-61.
[140] D. Narek, A women scientist speaks, in Voices From Women's Liberation, L. R. Tanner, Ed. New American Library, New York (1970).
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[141] M. B. Ogilvie,Women in Science, MIT Press, Cambridge (1986).
[142] L. M. Osen,Women in Mathematics, MIT Press (1974).
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[143] M. Parker,She Does Math! Real-Life Problems from Women on the Job, The Mathematical Association of America, Washington, D.C. (1995).
[144] E. C. Patterson, Mary Somerville, British Journal for the History of Science 4 no. 16 (1969), 311-339.
[145] E. C. Patterson,Mary Somerville, Oxford University Press, New York (1979).
[146] E. C. Patterson,Mary Somerville and the Cultivation of Science, 102, Nijhoff, The Hague (1983).
[147] T. Perl, The Ladies' Diary or Woman's Almanack, 1704-1841, Historia Mathematica 6 no. 1 (1979), 36-53.
[148] T. Perl, Math Equals: Biographies of Women Mathematicians and Related Activities, Addison-Wesley, Menlo Park, CA (1978).
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[149] T. Perl, Women and Numbers-Lives of Women Mathematicians, Wide World Publishing.
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[150] T. Perl and J. Manning,Women, Numbers, and Dreams, National Women's History Project, Santa Rosa (1985).
[151] T. H. Perl and J. M. Manning,Women, Numbers, and Dreams: Biographical Sketches and Math Activities, National Women's History Project, Santa Rosa, CA (1982).
[152] R. Perry and L. Greber, Women and computers: an introduction, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 16 no. 1 (1990), 74-101.
[153] P. I. Polubarinove-Kochina,Love and Mathematics: Sofya Kovalevskaya, Mir, Moscow (1985).
[154] K. D. Rappaport, Rediscovering women mathematicians, Mathematical Associaiton of Two Year Colleges Journal 13 no. 1 (1979).
[155] K. D. Rappaport, Rediscovering women mathematicians, Mathematical Associaiton of Two Year Colleges Journal 13 no. 2 (1979), 94-97.
[156] K. D. Rappaport, Rediscovering women mathematicians, Mathematical Associaiton of Two Year Colleges Journal 13 no. 3 (1979), 174-178.
[157] K. D. Rappaport, S. Kovalevsky: A mathematical lesson, The American Mathematical Monthly 88 no. 8 (1981), 564-574.
[158] P. J. Read and B. L. Witlieb,The Book of Women's Firsts, Random House, New York (1992).
[159] C. Reid, The Autobiography of Julia Robinson, College Mathematics Journal 17 no. 1 (1986), 2-21.
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[160] C. Reid, Being Julia Robinson's sister, AWM Newsletter 26 no. 5 (1996), 22-28.
[161] L. Reimer and W. Reimer,Mathematicians are People Too, Dale Seymour, Menlo Park (1990).
[162] J. Rist, Hypatia, Phoenix 19 no. 3 (1965), 214-225.
[163] J. Rist, Hypatia, Phoenix 19 (1965), 214-225.
[164] P. Rothman, Genius, gender and culture: Women mathematicians of the 19th century, Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 13 (1988), 64-72.
[165] J. H. Sampson, Sophie Germain and the theory of numbers, Archive for the History of Exact Sciences 41 (1990), 157-161.
[166] P. Selvin, Profile of a field: mathematics [heroism is still the norm], Science 255 no. 5050 (1992), 1382-1383.
[167] R. Siegmund-Schultze, Hilda Geiringer-von Mises, Charlier series ideology, and the human side of the emancipation of applied mathematics at the university of Berlin during the 1920s, Historia Mathematica 20 (1993), 364-381.
[168] C. Smorynski, Julia Robinson, in memorium, The Mathematical Intelligencer 8 no. 2 (1986), 77-79.
[169] R. I. Soare, Louise Hay: 1935-1989, Association for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 20 no. 1 (1990), 3-4.
[170] M. Somerville,Personal Recollections from Early Life to Old Age, of Mary Somerville, with Selections from Her Correspondence, Roberts Brothers, Boston (1876).
[171] B. Srinivasan, Ruth Moufang, 1905-1977, The Mathematical Intelligencer 6 no. 2 (1984), 51-55.
[172] B. Srinivasan and J. D. Sally,Emmy Noether in Bryn Mawr: Proceedings of a Symposium Sponsored by the Assoication for Women in Mathematics in Honor of Emmy Noether's 100th Birthday, , Springer, New York (1983).
[173] D. Stein,Ada: A Life and a Legacy, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (1985).
[174] B. Stillman, Sofya Kovalevskaya: Growing up in the sixties, Russian Literature Triquarterly 9 (1974), 276-302.
[175] S. Stinnett, Women in statistics: Sesquicentennial activities (Part of a special issue on: American Statistical Assocation history), The American Statistitician 44 no. 2 (1990), 74-80.
[176] J. Tattersall and S. McMurran, Hertha Ayrton: A persistent experimenter, Journal of Women's History 7 no. 2 (1995), 86-112.
[177] G. J. Tee, The pioneering women mathematicians, Mathematical Chronicle 1/2 (1981), 31-56.
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[178] G. J. Tee, The pioneering women mathematicians, Mathematical Intelligencer 5 no. 4 (1983), 27-36.
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[179] B. Toole,Ada, The Enchantress of Numbers: A Selection from the Letters of Lord Byron's Daughter and her Description of the First Computer, Strawberry Press, Sausalito, CA (1992).
(abstract)
[180] D. M. Tracy and S. M. Davis, Females in mathematics: erasing a gender-related math myth, Arithmetic Teacher 37 no. 4 (1989), 8-11.
[181] S. Troemel-Ploetz, Mileva Einsten-Maric--The women who did Einstein's mathematics, Women's Studies Internation Forum 13 no. 5 (1990), 415-432.
[182] C. Truesdell, Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Archive for History of Exact Sciences 40 (1989), 113-142.
[183] K. Uhlenbeck, Coming to Grips With Success: A Profile of Karen Uhlenbeck, Math Horizons 3 no. 4 (1996).
[184] R. Wallis and P. Wallis, Female Philomaths, Historia Mathematica 7 no. 1 (1980), 57-64.
[185] P. H. Weisbard,The History of Women and Science, Health and Technology, a Bibliographic Guide to the Professions and the Disciplines, , University of Wisconsin System Women's Studies Librarian, (1993).
[186] F. J. Weyl, Mina Rees, president-elect 1970, Science 1970 no. Feb 20 (1970), 1149-1151.
[187] H. Weyl, Emmy Noether, Scripta Mathematica 3 no. 3 (1935), 201-220.
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[188] A. Wheeler and O. Hazlett,Outstanding Women in Mathematics and Science, National Women's History Project .
[189] B. Whitman, An American woman in Gottingen, The Mathematical Intelligencer 15 (1993), 60-62.
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[190] B. Whitman, S. Mary Frances Winston Newson: The first American woman to receive a Ph.D. in mathematics from a European university, Mathematics Teacher 1983 no. Nov (1983), 576-577.
[191] B. S. Whitman, Women in the American Mathematical Society before 1900, AWM Newsletter no. September/October 1983 (1983), 7-9.
[192] S. Wiegand, Grace Chisolm Young, AWM Newsletter 7 no. 3 (1977), 5-10.
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[193] S. Wiegand, Grace Chisholm Young and William Henry Young: A partnership of itinerant British mathematicians in the early twentiety century, (1994).
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[194] M. B. Williams, Carol Karp, Assocation for Women in Mathematics Newsletter 3 no. 1 (1973), 2-3.
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