Anne Lester Hudson (January 30, 1932 - January 02, 2025) was an American mathematician and mathematics educator. Her research specialty was the theory of topological semigroups; she was also known for her skill at mathematical problem-solving, and has coached students to success in both the International Mathematical Olympiad and the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition. [1] She is a professor emeritus at the Georgia Southern University-Armstrong Campus (formerly Armstrong State College). [2]
Born as Anne Lester, [3] Hudson was originally from Mississippi, [4] and grew up in Inverness, Mississippi, a town so small that there were only seven students in her high school class. [1] She did her undergraduate studies at Hollins College, with Herta Freitag as a mentor. Unusually for the time, she continued at Hollins for four years, instead of transferring after two years to another university, in order to continue working with Freitag. [1] She graduated in 1953. [3]
In 1961, she earned her Ph.D. in mathematics from Tulane University, where she also met her husband, mathematician Sigmund Hudson. [1] Her dissertation, On the Structure of Certain Classes of Topological Semigroups, was supervised by Paul Stallings Mostert. [5] She became the first woman to earn a doctorate in mathematics at Tulane. [1]
After postdoctoral studies funded by the National Science Foundation and NATO, [4] Hudson became a faculty member at Syracuse University, and earned tenure there in 1966 for her research. [6] In 1971 she moved to Armstrong State College in Georgia, "to an environment more heavily involved in undergraduate teaching". [4]
In 1994 Hudson directed the United States Math Olympiad Program, a training program for the U.S. team in the International Mathematical Olympiad. [7] She went to Hong Kong, where the Olympiad was held, as the coach for the team, [1] and led the team to win the Olympiad. [4] [1]
In 1993, when the Mathematical Association of America began giving out its Deborah and Franklin Haimo Awards for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics, Hudson was one of the first winners. [8] The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching named her as one of their 1996 Outstanding Professors of the Year. [9] She was given a special commendation by the Georgia House of Representatives in 1997. [4] Hollins College has also given her their outstanding alumna award. [1]
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Herta Freitag was an Austrian-American mathematician, a professor of mathematics at Hollins College, known for her work on the Fibonacci numbers.
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