Jeanne LaDuke

Alice Jeanne LaDuke (born June 27, 1938) is an American mathematician who specialized in mathematical analysis and the history of mathematics. She was also a child actress who appeared in one film (The Green Promise).

Early life and film career

LaDuke was raised on a farm in Posey County,[1] in southwest Indiana. Her parents were college-educated and an aunt who taught mathematics in Chicago frequently visited, bringing mathematics puzzles for LaDuke.[2]

As a child, she was cast from a field of 12,000 4-H members to play a small part in The Green Promise (1948)[1] as farm girl Jessie Wexford, the sister of Natalie Wood's character's love interest.[3] Wood and LaDuke shared a tutor who taught them both string games as well as their school curriculum.[4]

Education

LaDuke studied mathematics at DePauw University in the 1950s, and roomed with another mathematics major from Oregon, who showed her the state on summer camping trips.[2]

She earned a master's degree in mathematics, but was unable to obtain a teaching position with it because the schools she applied to only hired men. She returned to Oregon in 1966 as a doctoral student at the University of Oregon,[2] and completed her Ph.D. in 1969 with a dissertation in mathematical analysis supervised by Kenneth A. Ross on Ep Space: Essentially a Product of Cp Spaces.[5]

Mathematics career

After completing her doctorate, LaDuke spent the following thirty years as a faculty member of the department of mathematical sciences at DePaul University.[2] She retired in 2003.[6]

With Judy Green, she is the author of Pioneering Women in American Mathematics: The Pre-1940 PhD’s (American Mathematical Society and London Mathematical Society, 2009).[7] An annual lecture series on Women in Mathematics, Science, and Technology at DePaul is named after her.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 Manifold, Sara (April 27, 2011), "Movie star native will return to Mount Vernon for showing", Mount Vernon Democrat
  2. 1 2 3 4 Ryan, Catherine (Autumn 2010), "Not by the Numbers: On her own unconventional path, Jeanne LaDuke details the early history of women in American mathematics", Oregon Quarterly, University of Oregon
  3. Sullivan, Rebecca (2016), Natalie Wood, Palgrave Macmillan, p. 23, ISBN 9781844576708
  4. Finstad, Suzanne (2009), Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood, Crown/Archetype, p. 75, ISBN 9780307428660
  5. Jeanne LaDuke at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. Mathematical Sciences Faculty & Staff, DePaul University College of Science and Health, retrieved 2017-11-09
  7. Reviews of Pioneering Women in American Mathematics:
    • Charles Ashbacher (January 2009), MAA Reviews,
    • Amy Shell-Gellasch (2009), Isis 100 (4): 925–926, doi:10.1086/652073
    • Amy Ackerberg-Hastings (February 2010), Historia Mathematica 37 (1): 124–128, doi:10.1016/j.hm.2009.09.001
    • Margaret A. M. Murray (May 2010), The College Mathematics Journal 41 (3): 248–251, doi:10.4169/074683410x488755
    • Andrea Blunck (2010), Mathematical Reviews, MR 2464022
    • Sorelle A. Friedler (June 2011), ACM SIGACT News 42 (2): 37–41, doi:10.1145/1998037.1998047
  8. Hayda, Julian (October 1, 2014), "Field Museum Chief Curiosity Correspondent Emily Graslie discusses women in STEM at DePaul", The DePaula
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