Princeton University. Department of Mathematics.

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The 1930s saw the flowering of a unique mathematical community at Princeton University, sparked by the construction of a luxurious new building Fine Hall (now Jones Hall) designed to facilitate a real community of mathematicians engaged in research and closely linked with mathematical physicists in the attached Palmer physics laboratory. This community was unlike any other in America before that time and perhaps afterwards, and had important consequences for American mathematics. With the planning and founding of the Institute for Advanced Study at the beginning of the decade, which shared Fine Hall with the university mathematics department during the period 1933 to 1939, a very exciting environment developed which many students and faculty were loath to leave.

From the description of Department of Mathematics Oral History Project records, 1985. (Peking University Library). WorldCat record id: 74213905

From the guide to the Department of Mathematics Oral History Project records, 1985, (Princeton University. Library. Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections)

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