Earl_Taft
Earl Taft
American mathematician
Earl Jay Taft (1931–Aug. 9, 2021)[1] was an American mathematician specializing in abstract algebra. He is the namesake of the Taft Hopf algebra[2] which he introduced in a 1971 publication,[3] and he was the founding editor of the journal Communications in Algebra.[4] He was Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Rutgers University.[5]
Taft graduated from Amherst College in 1952.[6] He completed his doctorate at Yale University in 1956. His dissertation, Invariant Wedderburn Factors, was supervised by Nathan Jacobson.[7] After working as Ritt Instructor of mathematics at Columbia University from 1956 to 1959,[6] he moved to Rutgers University, where he remained for many years.[8] He was also a regular visitor to the Institute for Advanced Study.[6]
Taft's wife, Hessy Levinsons Taft, had been publicized as "the most beautiful Aryan baby" in Nazi propaganda despite being Jewish. Her family escaped Nazi Germany for France, Cuba, and later the US, and she met Taft as a graduate student in chemistry at Columbia University, while he was an instructor there.[8]
After Taft retired from Rutgers, he and his wife moved to New York City.[8] Taft died in San Francisco at the age of 89.[9]
- Birth year from German National Library catalog entry, retrieved 2019-07-16.
- Dougherty, Steven T.; Kör, Arda; Leroy, André (2019), "Generating characters of non-commutative Frobenius rings", Rings, modules and codes, Contemp. Math., vol. 727, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, pp. 83–92, doi:10.1090/conm/727/14626, MR 3938141, S2CID 145948749. See Section 2.2, "Taft Hopf Algebras", p. 90.
- Taft, Earl J. (1978), "Editing a Photographically Reproduced Mathematics Journal", in Balaban, Miriam (ed.), Scientific Information Transfer: The Editor's Role (Proceedings of the First International Conference of Scientific Editors, April 24–29, 1977, Jerusalem), Springer Netherlands, pp. 415–418, doi:10.1007/978-94-009-9863-6_55
- Past member, Institute for Advanced Study, retrieved 2019-07-16
- Wolf, Lauren K. (September 8, 2014), "Hessy Taft: Jewish survivor and longtime ACS member describes how she was once a Nazi poster child", Chemical & Engineering News, 92 (36), American Chemical Society: 30, doi:10.1021/cen-09236-scitech3
- "Earl Taft obituary", The New York Times, August 15, 2021
- Iyer, Uma N.; Montgomery, Susan; Ng, Siu-Hung; Radford, David (July 2023). "In Memory of Earl Jay Taft (1931–2021)" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 70 (6): 939–943. doi:10.1090/noti2720.
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/nytimes/name/earl-taft-obituary?id=14493314
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