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  1. Anneli Cahn Lax (23 February 1922, Katowice – 24 September 1999, New York City) was an American mathematician, who was known for being an editor of the Mathematics Association of America 's New Mathematical Library Series, and for her work in reforming mathematics education with the inclusion of language skills.

    • Mathematics
    • September 24, 1999 (aged 77), New York City
  2. Anneli Cahn Lax (Katowice, 23 de fevereiro de 1922 – Nova Iorque, 24 de setembro de 1999) foi uma matemática estadunidense. Foi casada com o matemático Peter Lax. Biografia. Anneli Cahn frequentou a escola em Berlim, mas, por ser judia, ela e sua família fugiram do regime nazista em

    • Estados Unidos
  3. Anneli Cahn was born in Katowice, then a German city, but now part of Poland, on February 23, 1922. Her family fled Hitler’s regime in 1935 and settled in New York. She married Peter Lax, a fellow math-ematician, in 1948. Their lives together included a shared love for mathematics.

  4. 24 de set. de 1999 · Summary. Anneli Lax was a Polish-born American mathematician who was important for her contributions to mathematical education and mathematical publishing. View four larger pictures. Biography. Anneli Cahn's educational experiences prior to college were repeatedly disrupted by her family's flight from the Nazis.

  5. 29 de set. de 1999 · Anneli Cahn Lax, a professor and editor who was a leader in the publishing of mathematical literature, died on Friday at her home on Manhattan's Upper West Side. She was 77. Professor Lax had...

  6. Anneli Cahn Lax was the editor-in-chief of the series, intended as mathematical expositions written by outstanding mathematicians for an audience not necessarily having advanced mathematical education. The first six volumes in the series were published in 1961 by Random House and the L. W. Singer Company.

  7. Anneli Lax, the NML?s technical editor for almost forty years, was born Anneli Cahn on February 23, 1922, in the Kattowitz, part of Germany at the time, but part of Poland soon after. Her family left Kattowitz for Berlin in 1929 to escape discrimination against Germans, but in 1933, to escape discrimination against Jews, moved to Paris ...