INTRODUCTION:
Many thanks to the members who have sent information for this newsletter.
But we can always do with more. Please send news as soon as you have anything
of possible interest to CMSA Members and the Combinatorial Community,
even if there is no newsletter imminent!
Please email the Newsletter Editor on
ejb@maths.uq.edu.au.
CLOSING DATE for Issue 10: 30 September 2002.
CMSA WEB PAGE: http://www.maths.uq.edu.au/~db/CMSA/cmsa.html
NEWSLETTER WEB VERSIONS: (complete list) http://www.maths.uq.edu.au/~ejb/cmsa-newsletters.html
CMSA CONFERENCE HISTORY PAGE (all past conferences organised under the CMSA; thanks to Kevin McAvaney for starting this page) http://www.maths.uq.edu.au/cdmc/history.html
A useful combinatorial site is the British Combinatorial Committee's
web page:
http://www.maths.qmw.ac.uk/~pjc/bcc/bcc.html
(Conference listings in combinatorics are also available from that page.)
CONTENTS:
AIMS of the newsletter:
NEWS from the CMSA PRESIDENT
This year is quite a busy one for the combinatorics conferencer. For instance, in Melbourne we will have two international conferences in July, the first on Stochastic Processes and their applications (the scope includes discrete random processes) which will be immediately followed by FPSAC. Simultaneous with the Stochastic Processes is ACISP, on Information Security, also in Melbourne, and simultaneous with FPSAC is the AWOCA meeting at Fraser Island. These conferences and more are mentioned in the conference section of this newsletter.
Professor Brendan McKay deserves congratulations for obtaining one of the 23 ARC Professorial Fellowships awarded in 2002. Probably not all members are aware that this is the first year of a new scheme, a little different from the earlier "Senior Research Fellows".
Sadly, Professor Bill Tutte passed away earlier this month. His eminence in the field, including his achievements in code-breaking of the Lorenz cipher in World War II, would be hard to surpass. His interest in combinatorics and in continued contact with his combinatorial colleagues remained with him until the end. I heard that it was for this reason that he moved back, a year or two ago, to Waterloo from the UK. Only last October, he became an Officer of the Order of Canada. An obituary is at http://www.cms.math.ca/bulletins/obit.html and there are a few nice web pages on the Lorenz cipher at http://www.codesandciphers.org.uk/lorenz/fish.htm .
It is regrettable that Professor Herb Shank
also passed away recently.
Herb worked on graph theory, embeddings and polynomials.
Herb spent a good deal of time at Waterloo, though probably not as
much as Bill Tutte. Anne Street pointed out to me that both Bill and
Herb were invited speakers at the first combinatorics conference in
Brisbane (the third Australian conference, in 1974). Bill talked
about the graph of the chromatic polynomial of a graph, and Herb
talked about left-right paths in a plane graph. Anne also recalls
that Bill's presence was assisted by an eclipse of the sun, not
visible from the Northern Hemisphere, making it possible to snare him
as he went by to observe it.
Nick Wormald
nick@ms.unimelb.edu.au
This will be held at the University of Melbourne, Parkville, from 1-5 July 2002.
Please see the web page http://www.spa28.ms.unimelb.edu.au/.
The 7th Australasian Conference on Information Security and Privacy
(ACISP'02) will be held in Melbourne from July 3 to 5 at Rydges Riverwalk
Hotel. In conjunction with the conference, there is an afternoon workshop
on computer forensics on July 2 at Deakin's Toorak campus.
Details can be found on
http://www.cm.deakin.edu.au/ACISP'02.
The submission deadline for ACISP papers,
published by Springer, was February 18, 2002.
Lynn Batten, Deakin University
Enjoy the tranquil beauty of Fraser Island while attending stimulating seminars on combinatorics and combinatorial algorithms.
Check out the venue at http://www.kingfisherbay.com/.
The program involves six internationally renowned invited speakers. They are:
Abstract for contributed talks will be accepted up until 20th of June.
Check out all the details on the website http://www.maths.uq.edu.au/~njc/awoca/awoca2002.
Contacts:
Diane Donovan
dmd@maths.uq.edu.au
Abdollah Khodkar
ak@maths.uq.edu.au
Please see the web site http://www.fpsac.ms.unimelb.edu.au/.
Frank Ruskey fruskey@csr.uvic.ca
[On behalf of the organizing committee: Fan Chung, Chris Godsil, Jerry Griggs, Laci Lovasz, Brendan McKay, Jeffrey Remmel, Christophe Reutenauer, Frank Ruskey (Chair), Carla Savage, Douglas Stinson, Doug West.]
All the invited speakers will be women, but otherwise the workshop is open to everybody who works, or has any interest in, GROUPS and GRAPHS.
The Workshop will be held in Bulgaria on the coast of the Black Sea from
August 31 to September 6, 2002.
Early registration closes 30 June 2002.
For further information please see the web page at
http://www.moi.math.bas.bg/EWM02/
A list of invited speakers and further conference details will be announced late in July.
Contributed talks are welcome in any area of combinatorial mathematica or combinatorial computing. Talks will be of 20 minutes duration, including discussion time.
Email enquiries: Wal Wallis wdwallis@math.siu.edu
The 27ACCMCC has been advertised on
http://www.ams.org/mathcal/
http://at.yorku.ca/amca/index.htm
and
http://www.netlib.org/confdb/Conferences.html.
The 27ACCMCC web page is
http://www.cs.newcastle.edu.au/~accmcc/.
Abstracts can now be submitted online through the web site. The closing date for these is 18 November 2002.
There is a Prize for the best Student Talk, awarded by the CMSA.
Any enquiries, please email either accmcc@cs.newcastle.edu.au or lbrankov@cs.newcastle.edu.au
Ljiljana Brankovic
This year the annual NZMRI summer workshop will be based in beautiful New Plymouth in the North Island of New Zealand. This follows previous workshops in Huia (1994), Tolaga Bay (1996, 1997), Napier (1998, 2002), Raglan (1999), Kaikoura (2000), and Nelson (2001).
The topic for New Plymouth (2003), will be Combinatorics and Combinatorial Aspects of Biology although this will be interpreted broadly. As usual, families are invited to come. We especially encourage New Zealand graduate and senior students, and ask that most of the talks be directed at a graduate student level. The standard format is that we have lectures in the morning, the afternoons are left free for individual pursuits, families, sightseeing, mathematical discussions, and the like, and we have lectures in the early evening after dinner. There will also be one day off (traditionally Wednesday).
We have a stellar group of speakers, all of whom are world renowned mathematicians and computer scientists, and very fine speakers. We have asked that the speakers give a series of 2-3 lectures for this workshop, the first two being easily accessibly to graduate students.
Our speakers currently include (in no particular order):
This should be a wonderful workshop. As usual, we will cover most local costs for NZ residents. This year we will make sure that the meeting does not get too big. We will soon be putting out an announcement asking for numbers. If you wish to be on such a list, please e-mail Geoff Whittle: Geoff.Whittle@mcs.vuw.ac.nz.
Permutation Patterns - 2003 will be held at the University of Otago, New Zealand, 10 - 14 February 2003.
See http://www.cs.otago.ac.nz/staffpriv/mike/PP2003/FirstAnnouncement.html for more information.
Brian Alspach is 65 next year and we are celebrating his birthday in a spectacular "Graph Theory of Brian Alspach" conference from May 25 to 29 of 2003 on the beautiful campus of Simon Fraser University.
Visit the conference web site: http://www.cs.uleth.ca/gtba
If you wish to be put on our mailing list, please send e-mail to Hadi Kharaghani at hadi@cs.uleth.ca.
A very useful website giving upcoming conferences in Coding,
Cryptography and Effective Algebra AND their deadlines is
http://www-rocq.inria.fr/codes/Anne.Canteaut/annonces.html .
RECENT NEWS OF CMSA MEMBERS and others:
News from Kevin McAvaney in Oman:
Kevin McAvaney at Sultan Qaboos University in Oman visited the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at Kuwait University from 11 - 15 May 2002 to work with Peter Horak on some graph theory. While there he gave a department seminar on the problem of fair division, and a combinatorics seminar on homogeneous graphs.
Andrei Kelarev from Tasmania, has some good news about his daughter Elena (grade 12). Congratulations to Elena!
The team to represent Australia at the International Mathematical Olympiad, at Glasgow, UK, from 19 to 30 July, is (all grade 12s):
News of visitors to Queensland:
The AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF COMBINATORICS :
There is now a web page for the Australasian Journal of
Combinatorics, and it has a search facility for past authors and
for keywords in paper titles. See
http://ajc.math.auckland.ac.nz/ .
Instructions to authors are also available from this web site.
Volume 26 goes to the printers soon and will appear in September 2002. The contents of volumes are listed at the above web page; Volume 26 will be listed shortly.
Submissions to the AJC may be sent to ajc@maths.uq.edu.au . Electronic submissions are encouraged. For paper submissions, please check the web page.