WMY2000 NewsLetter 3 
EDITORIAL
The Twelfth General Assembly of the International Mathematical 
Union 
(IMU) was held in 
Lucerne (Switzerland) on July 31st and August 1st, 1994, just 
before the 
International 
Congress of Mathematicians, ICM'94, in Zurich.
It was on the occasion  of the previous General Assembly in Kobe 
(Japan), 
August 18-19, 
1990, that the following Resolution was voted :
"Since the IMU wishes to mark the turn of the century in a 
manner 
appropriate to the 
standards set up by David Hilbert in 1900, the General Assembly 
directs 
the Executive 
Committee (EC) to set up a committee to report to the adhering 
bodies by 
September 1991 on 
how to accomplish this, so that in 1994 the Assembly can discuss 
it and 
decide how to 
proceed".
Following this Resolution, the EC of IMU created a ``Turn of the 
Century 
Committee", 
chaired by Professor Jacob Palis Jr, Secretary of IMU, and having 
as 
members Professors V. 
Arnold, F. Hirzebruch, L. Lovasz, B. Mazur, S. Mizohata, W. 
Thurston, J. 
Tits, and S. 
Varadhan.
The IMU launched in May 1992 the World Mathematical Year (WMY 
2000) with 
the 
sponsorship of UNESCO (Professor Federico Mayor), of the Third 
World 
Academy  of 
Sciences (Professors Abdus Salam and Carlos Chagas), of the French 
Minister of Research 
and Space (Professor Hubert Curien), of the Brazilian Secretary of 
State 
for Science and 
Technology (Professor Helio Jaguaribe), of the Brazilian Academy 
of 
Sciences (Professor 
Israel Vargas) and, ICM'94 being organized in Switzerland, of the 
Swiss 
Federal Counsellor 
(Dr. Flavio Cotti). The document issued after this meeting was 
named 
"Declaration  of Rio de 
Janeiro for Mathematics".
At the Lucerne General Assembly, a report was presented on the 
work of 
the Turn of the 
Century Committee and on the plans for WMY 2000.
The corresponding  proposals were unanimously endorsed  by the 
General 
Assembly :
Resolution 2
"The General Assembly thanks the Turn of the Century Committee for 
its 
report. It asks the 
new Executive Committee to proceed with the planning of World 
Mathematical Year 2000, 
and to organize and coordinate activities such as :
- a)	inviting a select group of outstanding mathematicians to 
present their 
views on topics they 
expect to be central to mathematical activity in the next century.
 - b)	selecting a number of symposia, some possibly organized 
together with 
other scientific 
bodies, dedicated to mathematics, its applications and its role in 
society.
 - c)	events to be held under the auspices of the International 
Commission 
for Mathematical 
Instruction (ICMI), the Commission for Development and Exchange 
(CDE) and 
the 
International Commission for History of Mathematics (ICHM).
 
The Executive Committee is asked to explore the possibilities 
provided by 
communications 
technology for uniting activities the world over".
It is to be noted that, in her address at the Opening Ceremony of 
ICM'94, 
the Federal 
Counsellor, Mrs Ruth Dreifuss, endorsed WMY 2000.
Following these important decisions, there was considerable 
exchange of 
views on the 
subject during ICM'94, where many ideas and proposals were 
discussed.
A world-wide coverage for the Newsletter should therefore be 
systematically organized.
The Editors of the Newsletter, starting 1995, are :
Professor Mireille CHALEYAT-MAUREL (FRANCE)
Professor Gérard TRONEL (FRANCE)
World Correspondents for the Newsletter are :
Professor A. A. ASHOUR (ARAB REPUBLIC OF EGYPT)
Professor Mohammed H. A. HASSAN, Third World Academy of Sciences 
(ITALY)
Professor Angelo MARZOLLO , UNESCO (ITALY)
Professor Mitsuo MORIMOTO (JAPAN)
Professor Mogens NISS, Secretary of ICMI (DENMARK)
Professor Rolando REBOLLEDO, Chairperson of CDE (CHILE)
Professor Anna SIERPINSKA, Vice President of ICMI (CANADA)
All ideas and proposals connected with WMY 2000 should be sent to 
the 
Editors and to the 
World Correspondents.
It may be useful here to comment on part c) of the Resolution 
voted at 
the General Assembly 
of Lucerne. We recall, among the goals of WMY 2000, :
- help for less developed countries. It is essential that the 
countries 
that are members of 
UNESCO be gradually able to reach a level justifying their 
admission to 
IMU by the turn of 
the century. This implies considerable additional efforts in the 
field of 
education, training 
and access to scientific information (Aim No. 2 of the Declaration 
of Rio 
de Janeiro).
 - promotion of the image of Mathematics. Mathematics should be 
systematically present in 
the world of Information Sciences, thanks to examples and 
applications 
which will be 
scientifically exact and open to the largest number of people (Aim 
No. 3 
of the Declaration 
of Rio de Janeiro).
 
Here it is important to note the complete agreement of these goals 
with 
those of the 
American Mathematical Society (AMS). They are all related, in one 
way or 
another, to the 
task of teaching mathematics, hence to the key role played in this 
respect by ICMI, CDE and 
ICHM.
We also want to stress the part to be played by the various 
electronic 
communication 
technologies. Witness the growing importance of e-mail and the 
ever-rising number of 
electronic journals.
Note that WMY 2000 Newsletter is now available on the 
 
IMU's WWW server  and on 
the server of 
 European Mathematical Society
 
.
Electronic libraries and tele-conferences should be a set of 
fundamental 
tools for the end of 
this century and for the century to come. These tools should be 
made 
available to all 
mathematical centres in the world as soon as possible.
After our international discussions in Zurich, let us now all work 
together to achieve these 
goals.
                                                                   
       
            
           Jacques Louis LIONS
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