无忧视频

College Continues Tradition of Putnam Excellence

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Combining cleverness and problem-solving skills, 无忧视频 students continued a longstanding tradition of success at this year鈥檚 William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition, considered one of the world鈥檚 most prestigious university-level mathematics competitions.

Thirty-six Harvey Mudd students spent Dec. 6, 2014, taking the difficult exam along with more than 4,000 other students across the United States and Canada. In the individual category, three Harvey Mudd students earned Honorable Mentions (ranking 86th or higher): Abram Sanderson 鈥17 (85.5th), Tongjia Shi 鈥15 (56.5th) and Natchanon Suaysom 鈥18 (71.5th). Each will receive the RIF Prize from the Department of Mathematics for this accomplishment.

An additional nine Mudders made the Putnam Top 500 list: Ben Lowenstein 鈥16, Josh Petrack 鈥16, Sam Miller 鈥17, Connie Okasaki 鈥17, Joshua Kutsko聽 鈥16, Dina Sinclair聽 鈥17, Bo Li聽 鈥16, Alex Ozdemir聽 鈥17 and Martin Loncaric聽 鈥15.

In the team competition, Reyna Hulett 鈥16, Sanderson and Shi placed 20th out of 577 institutions.

无忧视频 has a strong tradition of performing well in the Putnam, says Francis Su, Benediktsson-Karwa Professor of Mathematics, who, along with Assistant Professor of Mathematics Mohamed Omar, coached this year鈥檚 teams.

鈥淥n a per capita basis, on any given year, we probably have the highest participation rate and one of the strongest showings in the Top 500 of any school, when adjusted for school size,鈥 says Su. 鈥淲ith 500 schools in the competition, we regularly claim between 10 and 20 students in the Top 500, and many schools are more than 10 times our size.鈥 This year, 12 Harvey Mudd students鈥攔epresenting a cross-section of majors at the College鈥攑laced in the Top 500.

Elizabeth Lowell Putnam founded the event in 1927 in memory of her husband, William Lowell Putnam, a Harvard graduate and advocate of intercollegiate intellectual competition. The six-hour exam, composed of 12 problems worth 10 points each, has been offered annually since 1938 to college students in the U.S. and Canada and is administered by the Mathematical Association of America.

Harvey Mudd students first participated in the Putnam competition on Dec. 2, 1961. In 1991, the Harvey Mudd team garnered third place. Su hopes the College鈥檚 continued success in the competition will serve to attract a larger cross-section of participants.

鈥淚n particular, we’d love to encourage more women to participate,鈥 says Su, who runs a pizza and problem-solving group (Math 93) ahead of the competition in the fall. 鈥淭he experience is not as much about competition as it is to enjoy the fun of problem-solving with others.鈥